Some of the authors are academics, some ecclesiastics, and some practitioners such as psychologists. |
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There are notable exceptions, especially among academics and medical faculties. |
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She says New Music is meant to be enjoyed by large audiences, not simply a coven of woolly-haired academics. |
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On both occasions politicians, academics and bureaucrats found themselves riding a tiger of unanticipated national emotion. |
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The case was worth deciding this way, just to witness otherwise sensible intelligent academics melt down. |
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Modern academics argue there are no givens, all is a social construct, but we suspect they are wrong. |
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The great thing about academics is that they are typically spineless cowards who really do respond to sufficient pressure. |
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It's easy for academics to turn their nose up at it, but time shows that it's wrong to say that because something is popular it isn't worthy. |
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Do academics as a rule occupy a greater square footage than, say, solicitors or accountants? |
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A feud between academics over Robert Burns' politics has taken a vitriolic turn with a savage attack by one expert on his rival's book. |
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I've just been asked to show a group of visiting academics around the library. |
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The second consequence was that many fortunes were made by university academics when their embryonic companies were floated on the stock market. |
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The administration has responded in a manner more befitting politicians than academics. |
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Indeed, even those academics unversed in the culture of the small college probably will not find them particularly surprising, taken one by one. |
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If anything, I'd presume there may well be a snobbishness about his work amongst academics, precisely because it was so popular. |
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Going to an extreme, some nationalist academics and intellectuals have called for the severance of diplomatic relations. |
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He has written that academics work more insidiously than the street toughs they effectively team up with on occasion. |
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Is this just another example of academics talking up unprovable dangers to draw attention to themselves? |
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On July 1, 2003, the faculty at the University of Waterloo will be joined by one of Canada's leading academics and brightest minds. |
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Media academics of the 60s bewailed the fact that we had little interpretive journalism. |
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Some of us would enjoy the ivory tower only too much, and there is plenty of self-interest on the part of academics who want to return to it. |
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But even academics who study plagiarism say they're not sure whether dishonesty is trending upward. |
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He is particularly bilious toward academics, repeatedly making claims about their narrow-mindedness. |
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I'm not going to an ivory tower to write reports and articles for other academics. |
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Administrators and public health academics are wary and mistrustful of physicians in the field. |
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But the issue won't be mitigated until conservatives make a serious effort to get into academics and make their arguments heard. |
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Experimental music is a term that is intimidating, evoking unlistenable sonic chaos meant only for academics. |
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I am accustomed to facing a wall of silence from academics I challenge, thus my surprise that you have troubled to answer. |
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These polymaths often resented their lack of recognition from specialist professional academics, and compensated by seeking political success. |
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To begin with, artists and critics, from academics to modernists, believed that American art lagged behind that of Europe. |
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And those who translate such works into English today tend to be academics rather than poets. |
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It is a sad reflection on contemporary universities that academics contribute little to the discussion. |
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Politicians, policy experts and academics are amazingly complacent about the blizzard of cross-subsidies that now rages. |
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The mere mention of ethnic diversity has academics plugging their ears and slamming paper bags over their heads. |
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But snobbery aside, could it be that a fashion for interrogatory esotericism does not stop with dusty academics? |
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He, too, has seen relatively unaccomplished academics present testimony on behalf of the Crown. |
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It's the tale of two contemporary literary academics sleuthing their way into a long lost love affair, and is utterly laden with coincidence. |
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He remains one of the rare leading academics whose work is intelligible to normal people. |
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English departments marginalize it, perhaps because academics consider religion incompatible with intellectualism. |
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This global health focus offered academics intellectual stimulation and prestige. |
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His analysis proves to be both entertaining and enlightening for film buffs and academics. |
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Even hardened journalists and academics, long resigned to their toil among the ignorant, have recoiled before the feeble-mindedness of the man. |
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Here, he thought, academics could live in comfort cheek-by-jowl with students in more modest accommodation. |
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The popularity of Jacques Derrida's philosophy among academics is hard to understand except as a symptom of decadence. |
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He has co-authored a paper that he hopes could help change the way academics and policy-makers look at entrepreneurs. |
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I would like to thank the academics from the seven universities from British Columbia to Nova Scotia who co-authored these papers. |
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Children who have contact with their fathers following a family break-up suffer fewer behavioural problems, academics said today. |
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The academics needed peer review and high quality publishing of their papers for success and status in their field. |
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He has won prizes from his peers and plaudits from discriminating academics. |
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This failure to meet publication dates highlights the problem of cloistered academics. |
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As a result, academics at Swiss universities are among the world's best-qualified to assess long-term trends in mountain climatology. |
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As partial academics they are unable to sponsor, promote or foster academic excellence. |
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If you poke them a bit, many academics will confess to sometimes feeling like impostors perennially threatened with humiliating exposure. |
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Even less alarmist academics thought that it had to worsen things, but as soon as it passed, more poor people began looking for and getting jobs. |
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The vast majority of academics evidently do without any extramural research funding or operate with minimal funding. |
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True individualism among academics, to say nothing of donnish eccentricity, is but a memory. |
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Two Oxford academics have been elected honorary members of the American Academy of the Arts and Sciences. |
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His collection of antique graphs and finely ruled charts works great for explaining information design to academics and engineers. |
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He lauded the school for encouraging sports and exhorted young sportsmen to make strides in sports and academics. |
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He will be joined by eight other people, ranging from academics to charity fundraisers, who will receive honorary doctorates from the university. |
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Of greater significance was the conservative outlook of the University's academics. |
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He is equally a loss to fellow academics and to the various committees on which he served. |
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Along with most academics he had strong views on how research should be managed. |
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It became a bestseller on the shelves of students, academics and workers throughout the land. |
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Many of the appointees have been academics rather than professional lawyers. |
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Only in very special cases do academics receive honorary doctorates from their own universities. |
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I've seen black professors asked about their experience as academics in a white profession. |
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However, some academics pour cold water on the notion of a machine-created universe. |
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However, it is doubtful that such a move would be well-received by students and academics. |
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Everyone can benefit from the most respected academics and the best tutors. |
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Inside Out showed anonymous copies of some of the student essays to academics. |
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The Liberal Democrats have been targeting students and academics on campus. |
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Up to four different lectures were held each day by academics such as Professor Anthony Grayling. |
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The last two books on offer are both compendiums of articles by different academics. |
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It will also include a series of lectures from internationally-renowned academics. |
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Educational visits are high on the list but contrary to belief the office is not just for scholars and academics. |
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The survey was carried out at Glasgow Royal Infirmary by Glasgow University academics. |
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The book will be most suitable for research students, postdocs and academics. |
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An insightful and intelligent collection of resources for academics and students. |
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The BIND database and its associated software tools are easily accessible to both academics and commercial companies worldwide. |
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He has actually lived what careerist academics prefer to patronise and jargonise in structuralist abstraction. |
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Seldon's authors, half of them academics, half journalists, are competent and fall down only in their often jejune judgments. |
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Most quislings come from the chattering classes, from academics and intellectuals. |
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Our academics have won prizes for their work on Maori but it is my guess that much of their work won't wear well over time. |
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There were no ranters or rabble-rousers, just an invited audience of academics, writers, politicians and sombre party members. |
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As many as 100,000 academics and support staff were taking part in a national day of action to protest against the offer. |
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The column was written by a collective of women and some men, many of them prominent academics and media activists in their own right. |
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He was also one of the few academics who could produce journalism better than most journalists. |
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Perhaps distantly connected, however, is the issue currently circulating of whether academics should journal at all. |
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For many academics the recognition they gain by advancing knowledge in their field is sufficient. |
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Slowly but surely, academics crawled out from the sanctity of their ivory tower hidey-holes to declare it an affront to modern womanhood. |
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Wood is one of the first academics to study a topic so integral to gaming as music. |
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The happy thing about academics is that they are typically such gutless cowards when faced with anything like a real public outcry. |
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Empiricism certainly has a role to play, but it cannot be the empiricism of ivory tower academics, and it cannot be an exclusive role. |
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Many academics will talk about productivity and value, and profitability, but these issues are red herrings. |
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But then, as academics and wordsmiths we always come back to either spoken or written words to convey what we experience deeply. |
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Politicians, academics and campaigners today routinely frame public issues in emotional terms. |
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He singled out the areas of sport, academics and opera for special mention in this regard. |
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When academics try to allay public fears with statistics, we must always ask who funded that research. |
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For her, progress of a student should never be confined to academics alone. |
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Historical perspective emancipated academics from the restrictions of contemporary viewpoints. |
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As troubles mounted, Sun cultivated ties to a circle of academics who study rural issues. |
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Their strongholds lie in the cities in which many students, academics, civil servants and public employees live. |
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Some academics eventually renounced their hostility to subject disciplines. |
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India has given us so many great mathematicians, philosophers, physicians, and academics in general, that this news item grieves us. |
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This staves off moral panic and encourages postmodernist academics to write papers in learned journals. |
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The aim of the Journal was to provide a forum for Australian Celticists, both academics and community members. |
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Curators have always had to steer between the demands of the general audience and those of restive academics. |
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We've always known school is educational in far more ways than academics can cover. |
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Denmark's book resulted from a multidisciplinary exercise involving academics from different countries. |
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Hochhuth claimed that he had sworn statements from secret informers witnessed by eminent academics. |
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For a long time, Irving used his streetwise independence to dazzle career academics with the arcane quality of his research. |
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Two such academics were so upset by the broadcast they injudiciously let the cat out of the bag completely. |
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In the United States, some academics have reportedly been pressured because of their views on the antiterror war. |
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This crude fabrication is a manifestation of a sharp rightward lurch experienced by so many academics. |
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Writers and literary academics have never been closer, and never further apart. |
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Anglo-American humanities academics has been strip-mining 20th Century European thinkers and writers for the last 30-40 years. |
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Despite strident criticisms of her views from legal academics and at times her brethren, she has maintained her positions with dignity. |
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Conspiracy theorists at Brunel say academics have logged on to their computers to vote only to find someone else has already done so for them. |
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University bosses urged academics today to end a marking boycott called as part of a long-running dispute over a pay deal. |
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Like many academics in recent years, he was consumed by the desire to become a public intellectual. |
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The compartmentalization that academics have allowed themselves to fall victim to is a catastrophe. |
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My course was engrossing, and it was taught by lawyers and academics of stature and reputation. |
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If top-fee universities in England start paying more, will Scottish universities be denuded of quality academics? |
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Modern academics see lycanthropy as a fantasy which reveals fundamental aspects of modern personality. |
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The academics claim pupils who had been spoon-fed at independent schools were less able to cope with autonomous learning. |
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At the hearing, it was the academics who talked turkey, and took on the real world. |
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As academics, doctors, engineers, and small business owners, they had stronger financial prospects in their adopted country. |
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Critics and academics frequently take Kurosawa to task for the lack of female perspective in his films. |
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As a fellow professor of academics, I share your admiration for malted beverages! |
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I looked down on figures who, with their consorts, advisers, bureaucrats and academics, had delivered their own people to the vampires. |
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Bradford University has helped academics in the region produce the highest number of spin-off companies in the country. |
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Whether or not he was obsessed with most facets of academics at my school as I did he would always be my best friend. |
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Obscure academics will trundle out to obfuscate the finer points of constitutional and ecclesiastical propriety. |
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What he says goes with those around him, such as the chairman of the constitutional court, the procurator general, even our academics. |
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The party's main recommendation was the establishment of a tenure track career pathway for outstanding trainee academics. |
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These included photographers, journalists, academics and researchers, Ordnance Survey map-makers and statisticians at the UK Census bureau. |
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The debate can not proceed at the slow pace to which academics are accustomed. |
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Researchers discovered that different academics gave different marks for the same essays. |
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This remains a balanced view which answers the many scurrilous attacks by academics and popular writers out to debunk. |
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This House sits here and deliberates on a bill like this from the perspective of academics, theoreticians, and philosophers. |
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This is a highly readable, jargon-free treatise on a notoriously prickly subject, intended for general readers rather than academics. |
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The unauthorised biographies flowed thick and fast, film-school recruitment rose and the academics had a field day. |
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Of the authors of the thirteen articles, seven were academics and six non-academics. |
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The alternative is that we will be left with universities run by second-rate academics and companies run by second-rate entrepreneurs. |
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These were the jet-setting academics of the ancient world, who were praised for their maxims and consulted for their wisdom. |
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They can open a window on the inner workings of ivory tower, debunking stereotypes of academics as detached from the real world. |
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Top academics are still be respected but no cachet is attached to the level of gaining a degree in any arts subject. |
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So, just as practitioners have come to realize the value of political education, the academics have met them halfway. |
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The essays are the individual or collaborative work of 21 academics from a variety of disciplines, mainly geographers. |
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Dinner parties and social gatherings on West Road were frequent events, and guests often included visiting academics as well as members of the university hierarchy. |
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Such a stance decentres the place and expertise of academics. |
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The media and academics love to portray these voters as the typical independent when they represent less than half of them. |
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Breman kept calling doctors and academics, but there were no answers to be found. |
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I think social banditry, as the academics call it, is a proud American tradition. |
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Beard does admonish the tendency of both academics and popular authors to present speculation as historical truth. |
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If academics vote to strike they could walk out next month or in March. |
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There had been no angry questions from the academics among his audience. |
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By the time the panel of academics who adjudicate on such matters in the States have had their final say on the matter, the world will be preoccupied with other things. |
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In addition to the formal legal process, a number of academics, lobbyists, journalists, and commentators have been kibitzing and barracking from the sidelines. |
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Indeed, one of the functions of entrepreneurs, as opposed to academics, is to figure out how to make a public good into an excludable private good. |
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In investigating domestic violence, it is tempting for academics to speak to only those more easily accessible women who are resident in refuges, rather than other victims. |
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So you've got the business people, the alpha geeks, the legislators, the military, the policy people and the academics talking about things from very different angles. |
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The academics secretly observed them in bars during evenings out, analysing their behaviour in detail for half an hour, then following their success afterwards. |
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She kept servants and, evidently, three slaves, and entertained academics and philosophers in an elite salon. |
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This is a written language which looks similar to runes and other ancient scripts, however academics have been struggling for many years to correctly decipher it. |
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But by the end of high school, Sara, who once excelled in academics, gymnastics, and volleyball, had changed. |
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The heretic Andrew Ferguson, The Weekly Standard Who is Thomas Nagel and why are so many of his fellow academics condemning him? |
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He applies the craft of great storytelling to a highly deserving subject that is normally the province of technocrats, academics, and financial wizards. |
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Unlike the financial accounting profession in Canada, the evolution of management accounting has not received a great deal of attention by academics. |
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So much of what you read and hear in the States is born out of a need for academics to be published in order to keep their tenure at universities. |
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He joins a chorus of leading figures and academics from the world of Scots art and culture who are concerned about the plight of Burns' birthplace. |
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He has none of the subtlety and nuance of black conservative academics such as Thomas Sowell and Walter Williams. |
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When I became a victim of the thought police I was genuinely surprised, and now I am afraid that my case has had a chilling effect on less established academics. |
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Instead of sounding out ideas in order to judge them critically, academics seem only too happy to silence debate in case it causes insult or offence to individuals. |
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Meanwhile at the top, those wonderful universities that pay such fantastic salaries to their academics, are producing a new class of rich who are becoming self-perpetuating. |
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It was only after wasting a year's worth of boarding school education that I made the semiconscious decision to start painting my lungs with powder and devouring my academics. |
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Where else is there a comparable gathering of eager, aggressively young law students and nerdy academics that only fellow nerds have ever heard of? |
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These cultural meets are also fast turning out to be platforms for bringing in tinsel stars, notwithstanding the fact that they have nothing to do with academics. |
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His sermonette about how academics and polemicists misuse history when they construct bogus categories like Fordism and Taylorism was very nicely done. |
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In pursuing its aims, the Society has provided a platform in London for heads of governments, ministers, diplomats, academics and business leaders. |
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The book is an essential source of ideas, discoveries and references for academics in biocomputing, bioinformatics researchers and computer scientists. |
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But almost everyone was too concerned with skyrocketing to fame with their indie band or landing a bit part in some MTV movie to be bothered by academics. |
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And I have always despised the monkish obscurity cultivated by certain academics. |
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Many Eastwood critics, few of them academics, have done a great deal more than just murmur. |
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He seemed skeptical, asking me if forward-deployed academics were value-added. |
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In his new book, Ignorance, neuroscientist Stuart Firestein goes where most academics dare not venture. |
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They say the increased minimum wage, calculated by academics at London University, would provide a better standard of living for families on the breadline. |
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Precisely because academics are free to express their own views, people know that a professor speaks for himself, and not necessarily for the university. |
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Unlike in other developed countries, artists and academics in the U.S. are not the national spokespersons that sports figures, entertainers and business people are. |
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Many Joycean academics agree that even after he met Nora and moved to Trieste, the red-light romps continued. |
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Most of us are in the indifferent camp thus allowing politicians, theologians and academics to nuke the world, while producing between them, not one thing of true value. |
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Government-approved academics in China have already started to trot out obfuscatory arguments designed to refute obvious objections to demands for market-economy status. |
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Similar to the Asquith Colleges, they were governed by French university statutes, and the staff members were accorded the rights of French academics. |
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Teenagers rebelling against step-parents and a lack of control over children in broken families could be responsible for the higher levels of smoking, the academics suggest. |
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In fact academics at the University of Virginia found that an out-of-body experience is a normal psychological response to an intensely stressful ordeal. |
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Over lunch at Mory's, Yale's tweedy private dining club, he suggests that academics underrate the President because they overvalue specialized knowledge. |
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At its best, it manages to create a panorama of art and cultural history, that elusive cross-disciplinary blend so much on the lips of academics but still so exceptional. |
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In addition to those who published no papers during the study period, another 215 academics who authored or co-authored at least one paper received zero citations. |
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The feature tries to touch on some of the more controversial points of the Gospels that have been fiercely debated by academics and clergymen over the years. |
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The South contented itself with idlis, dosas, academics and tradition. |
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They have become institutions measuring performativity in a very quantitative sense that favours the style of work of certain academics over others. |
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Most academics and most AUT members will oppose this ill-judged decision. |
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It used to be statesmen and academics who delivered commencement speeches. |
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Girls comprehensively outperformed boys in this year's academics. |
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He is not a socialist, but a pluralist who stands in a long tradition of sympathetic academics who wish to elevate the role of trade union leaders. |
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The one I use most of the time, and which I refer to in this post, is only for postgrads, academics and professionals, all of whom really should know better. |
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Ugly sisters and wicked stepmothers, handsome princes and beautiful princesses are all culprits in making some children grow up with low self-esteem, say the US academics. |
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So, maybe slow-speaking academics need to get with the program. |
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The guest list has so far been commendably free of the academics, hack-ademics, cranks and pseuds who once appeared to comprise the resident Montrose intelligentsia. |
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I know academics like to be provocative and have a good ding-dong. |
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The academics part of the programme is being supervised by professional guides and instructors and the language skills are taught by University graduates. |
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That's because the fault lies with the education system and so one will have to look deep down and find out what's causing this disinterest and hatred towards academics. |
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Television documentaries have used interviews with academics in two ways. |
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For example, the roots of Afrikaner Christian-Nationalist ideology are correctly traced to the Calvinist philosophy advocated by the Doppers and academics of Potchefstroom. |
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Despite the extremeness of its interpretation and the uniqueness of its style, Klossowski's book is readily meaningful to academics because it proceeds in the established way. |
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Following Microsoft's lead, Sony announced yesterday that it is opening up its motion controllers to academics and hobbyists. |
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Traditionally believed to have been written by Moses, most academics now believe they had many authors. |
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One of the first and most important in the city was the Political Economy Club, aimed at creating links between academics and merchants. |
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Several academics have also categorised Wicca as a form of nature religion, a term that is also embraced by many of the faith's practitioners. |
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Many of these terms have come into common use by the tourism industry and academics. |
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In 1959, the Mexican Academy of Sciences was created to coordinate scientific efforts between academics. |
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As academics like Peter Leeson and Marcus Rediker argue, a pirate was more often than not someone from a previous seagoing occupation. |
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The border between Asia and Europe was historically defined by European academics. |
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In sciences and social sciences the Rhondda has provided important academics within the aspects of Wales and on the World stage. |
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Equally most of the bishops and churchmen, who were presidents, were leading academics. |
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Many scholars and academics were involved in the work of the association at this time. |
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Such interpretations continue to attract the popular imagination and the scepticism of academics. |
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The General Council is a standing advisory body of all the graduates, academics and former academics of the university. |
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The practice has come under attack, especially by academics who accuse neuromarketers of selling junk science. |
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Indonesian is primarily used in business, politics, education, academics and the national media. |
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Current academics include Blake Morrison, Chris Baldick, Uttara Natarajan and Peter Dunwoodie. |
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The Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize is granted to ten scientists and academics every year. |
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The relative costs, benefits and beneficiaries of free trade are debated by academics, governments and interest groups. |
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I publish in a variety of different disciplinary journals, and I often coauthor projects with nonsocial work academics and practitioners. |
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Reading Ghost Hunters, it's hard not to reserve some admiration for the handful of academics who gave it the old college try. |
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Italy has been referred to as a great power by a number of academics and commentators throughout the post WWII era. |
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New Agers will revel with Mr Flame's academic explanations, while academics will be forced to debunk another contemporary urban guru. |
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A group of mathematic academics have created five different simulations of the crash that cost the lives of 239 people. |
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But some of the academics sound as averse to emo as the rioters in the street. |
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Various academics have written on how the Scottish Parliament can be improved as a governing institution. |
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As academics become a priority at some preschools, parents should worry that their offspring may not develop much-needed social skills. |
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While some academics call a stock split a non-event, Roger Perry, CEO of Rightline. |
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Media critics, journalism reviews and academics studying the news business have long lamented the poor coverage of what happens in statehouses. |
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Concern arose that academics were taking over Austen criticism and that it was becoming increasingly esoteric, a debate that has continued since. |
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There was a sense that legal academics, like academics generally, are being proletarianized, and this has significance for future scholarship. |
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Raghunathan, former bursar of the college, and Dr Vijay Thanka, dean of academics. |
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Raghunathan, who is a former bursar and Vijay Thanka, the dean of academics, for the post of the bursar. |
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Instead, both arrogantly wave away any criticism of their ability with the dismissive air of pseudointellectual academics. |
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Yes, those with green-eyed monsters in their souls can be black academics. |
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The French Revolution has received enormous amounts of historical attention, both from the general public and from scholars and academics. |
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Students at CCS learn through integration of experience and academics, intentional community building and personal growth and transformation. |
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I did so myself when I recorded the Traveller language, called Shelta by many academics and Cant by most Travellers. |
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Like many successful academics, Hofstadter knew that it took a ritualized schedule that was never deviated from to crank out the necessary words. |
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There are 12 Nobel laureates who were either students or academics at King's College London. |
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He only cares about sports. He has no interest in academics. |
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Despite the symbolic presence of a few Zairean academics at the seminar, the opinions of the Zaireans themselves were given little consideration. |
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Most applicants will be individually interviewed by academics at more than one college. |
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She is fluent not only in academese and Mormonish, but also in mediaspeak, a dialect that does not come naturally to academics. |
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Catherine's religious dedication increased as she became older, as did her interest in academics. |
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Judges are selected from amongst leading literary critics, writers, academics and leading public figures. |
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Many academics, historians, teachers, and journalists reject Wikipedia as a reliable source of information. |
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However, in case of entrepreneurship research, these notions are employed by academics too, but vaguely. |
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Its membership includes academics, practising lawyers and prominent community members. |
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It outlines how policy-makers, the health service, academics, and the third sector need to work together to deliver better outcomes for people with IPF and their families. |
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Researchers, including academics from the University of Exeter, have found high numbers of potato bush plants near the homes of bowerbirds in Australia. |
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As new mestiza academics and as agents of change, we must continue to Derrumbando Fronteras by breaking the boundaries to create un mundo sabio y justo. |
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Indeed, even before he took up the Burns Fellowship, Baxter had decided that bawdry was the weapon to wield against Otago's emasculating academics. |
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The voices of Cape York activists Noel Pearson and Jean Little, and academics Marcia Langton and Mick Dodson, today loom large in national debates. |
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They also discussed ways of benefiting from expertise of students and academics of Reggio Calabria especially in preserving heritage and restoring and maintaining buildings. |
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The methodology is based on surveying expert academics and global employers, and measuring research performance using data sourced from Elsevier's Scopus database. |
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The ideas of jiegui and Chinese characteristics set the backdrop for the competition between the MoCA and social work academics to recontextualize social work in China. |
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In the 20th century, Norwegian academics have been pioneering in many social sciences, including criminology, sociology and peace and conflict studies. |
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This collection of material inspired subsequent researchers and academics to gather traditional tales, fables and legends from all over the Archipelago. |
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His ontological argument is as familiar to academics as a footnote. |
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Futurologist Dr James Bellini and leading international trade academics Prof Peter Buckley and Adam Cross are among those giving keynote speeches. |
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When Marcelino Sanz de Sautuola first encountered the Magdalenian paintings of the Altamira cave, Cantabria, Spain in 1879, the academics of the time considered them hoaxes. |
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After disputes between students and Oxford townsfolk in 1209, some academics fled from the violence to Cambridge, later forming the University of Cambridge. |
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Knode was founded by Enlight Biosciences, a PureTech Health company based on a unique entrepreneurial partnership with major pharmaceutical companies and leading academics. |
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Today BTWHSPVA stands as one of Texas's premier arts magnet schools, noted for its blend of arts and academics and its culturally diverse faculty and student body. |
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Over the course of its history, a sizeable number of Cambridge University academics and alumni have become notable in their fields, both academic and in the wider world. |
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Both colleges supported the Jacobite rebellion and following the defeat of the 1715 rising were largely purged by the authorities of their academics and officials. |
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More than 2000 people, academics, scientists and technicians, are involved in research of a wide variety of subjects from basic research to applied research. |
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Medical staff, academics and most professionals in the field and international bodies such as the World Health Organization tend to avoid use of the term. |
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Having no fewer than 42 and no more than 65 members, the Council consists of lawyers, judges, and academics, and reflects a broad range of specialties and experiences. |
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Auckland's Grammar Schools share a common line of descent from the British Grammar School system, with a strong focus on academics and traditional British sports. |
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Fifteen academics and researchers from the UK and France contribute eight chapters examining plant food consumption and the role that phytonutrients play in the human diet. |
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In the early 1960s there was an exchange between judges and academics in the United Kingdom and United States comparing the process of appeal used in both nations. |
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Many law librarians and academics have commented on the changing system of legal information delivery brought about by the rapid growth of the World Wide Web. |
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It's also been suggested given the rarer incidences of these cases they would merit a much deeper analysis, what some academics have called psychological autopsy. |
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Leiden University has produced leading academics such as Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje, and still has academics who specialise in Indonesian languages and cultures. |
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Paul Wexler proposes that Esperanto is relexified Yiddish, which he claims is in turn a relexified Slavic language, though this model is not accepted by mainstream academics. |
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Few academics subscribe to the Iberian origin theory today, although some Spanish or Portuguese historians continue to support it over an Iroquoian root. |
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Twenty-six international academics and researchers contribute ten chapters reporting research on flame retardants and their functions, properties and safety. |
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Prior to the JAS article this theory was disputed by some academics. |
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From advancement to academics and from housing to sticker price, there is less and less difference between what used to be very distinct institutional types. |
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Beyond academics, the school puts an emphasis on personal and professional development including leadership, global awareness, and business skill building. |
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The idea is to create a network of players in innovation, including researchers, entrepreneurs, students and academics, to help them develop innovative projects. |
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When Alexander was 13, Philip began to search for a tutor, and considered such academics as Isocrates and Speusippus, the latter offering to resign to take up the post. |
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Whereas later economic ideas were often developed by academics and philosophers, almost all mercantilist writers were merchants or government officials. |
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