Within the flux of reciprocity, either everything becomes metaphorically figured or everything has the reality effect of the literal. |
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To respond to this reciprocity and interdependence, we propose to handle organization and software development integratedly. |
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It is possible to think of a number of ways in which reciprocity might sustain medical altruism. |
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We should never lose sight of the fact that it is engagement in a real economy that underpins reciprocity in society. |
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While some of this reflects a suspicion of the motives of foreign firms, there may also be an awareness of the lack of reciprocity. |
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The people women moneylenders lend to generally describe their credit practices as a form of reciprocity rather than exploitation. |
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There is value in sharing without expecting reciprocity, but if you do that with a moocher, there's really no value to either side. |
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We are so used to our vain understanding of the law of reciprocity that we think in terms of what we get back for what we give. |
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We must oppose any trade rules based on even the most minimalist form of reciprocity in market access. |
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We believe that reciprocity is not an appropriate basis for trade between countries and regions at such different levels of development. |
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People's generosity and the ideology of reciprocity palliated the experiences of poverty, hard times, and corn shortages. |
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In the visual arts, too, there was far more reciprocity than previously acknowledged. |
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Each campus would effectively be a separate campus, but there would be reciprocity between the various campuses. |
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Ontario's minister of health acknowledged the heroic work of healthcare workers, and this was an important act of reciprocity. |
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The founding principle of human culture in general is exchange, transforming hostility into reciprocity. |
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This will also guarantee the principle of reciprocity when relaxed travel terms are negotiated with other countries. |
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Ivanov said that the principle of reciprocity, a key principle in diplomacy, should be applied to the issue. |
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Even when I cooked dinner, which he'd devour with glee, he would feel no sense of reciprocity. |
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Thus the first fundamental principle of the gift economy is a return or reciprocity. |
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Furthermore, interpersonal relationships in Asia Pacific are based on reciprocity and return of favours. |
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Rather than labor the point, let us acknowledge that examples of true mutual reciprocity are found in the animal kingdom. |
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On the other hand, the North ought to follow suit, respecting the principle of reciprocity. |
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Thus began a long correspondence and professional friendship based on reciprocity and shared artistic beliefs. |
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In the 19th century, states dealt with each other strictly on the basis of reciprocity. |
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Each of the elements he names demands a communicative, rhetorically performed reciprocity that today's electronic media make almost unthinkable. |
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For a start, the whole idea of reciprocity and empowerment seems morally dubious to me. |
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More important, she highlights the inextricable relationship of the conditions of reciprocity to the meaning of one's subjectivity. |
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But, like a performance in an empty hall, there's no longer any reciprocity in Hurston's antiphonal epistemics. |
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Antonymous pairs have previously been described and categorized in terms of gradability, reciprocity, inverseness and so on. |
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It stands as a living entity in an ecosystem dependent on a participatory reciprocity. |
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But it is ordinary reciprocity that good psychoanalytic practice must, axiomatically, bar from the relationship of analyst and patient. |
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As with the turquoise mortgage of the katsina clowns, the idea of reciprocity is central. |
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Are buyers going to reveal their financial condition prior to the exchange as a gesture of reciprocity? |
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Kantian categories of thought which we use to make sense of the world are those possessing this property, which we shall term reciprocity. |
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The agreement provides a legal framework for co-operation based on equality, reciprocity and mutual benefit. |
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Actors engage in the formation of dyadic relationships, called guanxi, which are based on joint interest, interdependence, reciprocity, trust, and open-endedness. |
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There is a sense of reciprocity in their mutual engagement, a sense of benefit for families and the school. |
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Economic structures and processes are needed that reflect cooperation, mutual aid and reciprocity. |
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They are based on a restorative philosophy underpinned by values of reciprocity, solidarity, equilibrium, sustainability and collectivity. |
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Thus the Iranian recalcitrance, and the ensuing cycle of both sides demanding major concessions before offering any reciprocity. |
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As I showed previously, this was possible due to their strong system of private property rights enforced through sophisticated reciprocity relations known as potlatching. |
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The quid pro quo mentality or idea of reciprocity, based on a principle of equality, is therefore quite wrong. |
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A spiritual and reserved people, Cañaris follow a social code based on the reciprocity of goods and services. |
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In a rush of reciprocity, the Americans allowed funerals limited trespass, sparing pall-bearers the burden of toting caskets an extra 100 metres to the church's vestibule. |
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The effects of such scrupulous husbandry are manifest by the way in which the cultivated and natural landscape merge into one another in a rare reciprocity. |
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Similarly, Stephane and Maxim's relationship is also one of reciprocity. |
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While reciprocity is important, generosity is crucial to a good mate. |
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Further, reciprocity can be interpreted as flowing from the individual's desire to outbalance rule violations with offsetting moves in order to re-establish regularity. |
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Revisiting the soul music of Womack is a good first step to rescuing the reciprocity necessary for real intimacy. |
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He became a dashingly handsome man, and the Duchess of Montrose was not the only woman to become infatuated with him, though there was no reciprocity. |
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Despite their ability to encourage network reciprocity, Facebook and other online social networks have been plagued by the problem of how to make money. |
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Good faith can produce creative plans for reciprocity and greater integration. |
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However, it must be based on reciprocity and equality for all and not on the interests of one party at the expense of another. |
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As Europeans, we need to reiterate our unwavering commitment to the concept of reciprocity. |
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Indeed this would be inconsistent with the reciprocity principle which underlies the fact-based approach. |
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You can make out the tiny image of the photographer reflected in the cow's large liquid eye that captures a moment of reciprocity. |
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A lot of people do not realize that there is some reciprocity and some obligations there. |
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Indeed the Church can encourage all of them to live together peacefully and develop a culture of reciprocity in the world. |
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This is, in my opinion, a treaty which respects the concept of sustainable development in an atmosphere of reciprocity. |
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As we observe the changes in the late twentieth century, we can discern the similar reciprocity of millenarian hopes. |
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We will of course expect full reciprocity from those of our competitors who also have rights to content. |
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The logic of exchange is based on the principle of redistribution or reciprocity. |
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It bears emphasis that two basic notions are central to these themes: responsibility and reciprocity. |
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The contract includes a reciprocity condition: the chosen host institutions must fork out the equivalent amount to double the available funding. |
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Bonds of trust and reciprocity give people a sense of belonging to a group. |
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Diffuse reciprocity can take many forms, including concessions and derogations, or going out on a limb to persuade the capital for changes or a compromise. |
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A reciprocity system is in the final stages of validation for the calibration of underwater acoustic sensors. |
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We have made a strategic decision to advocate reciprocity, and are fully aware that this will demand enormous sacrifice. |
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This tended to increase the feeling of receptivity and reciprocity between the researchers and the audiences. |
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In other words, in spite of the facade of the modern state, power in most African polities progresses informally, between patron and client along lines of reciprocity. |
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By imposing on the economy the same principle that makes it possible for people to live with one another socially: reciprocity. |
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Also, in the absence of a treaty or arrangement, judicial assistance can be afforded if the principle of reciprocity applies. |
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A draft resolution using agreed language had been submitted in good faith, in the expectation of reciprocity, but that had not happened. |
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I welcome recent statements from my own government in the UK that appear to guarantee poorest countries as much time as they need before acquiring that reciprocity. |
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Like Australia, Chile allows foreign companies to set up Chilean subsidiaries to offer domestic flights in Chile, regardless of reciprocity. |
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The result of this reciprocity is what Maximus calls a theandric quality of human beings. |
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But for how long, if there is no reciprocity? |
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Using thorough and well-argued research, Eric Sabourin characterizes diverse intermediary situations between the polarisations of the social and economic logic of exchange and the logic of reciprocity. |
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Neither his fake narrative nor Eileen's perverse echoes of it are memories, stories, affording the reciprocity of an auratic relation. |
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Relocating itself, It looks for a reciprocity with the practices locality, in order to ponder over and modify social, economical, political and ideological backgrounds. |
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Therefore, a relatively inexpensive birthday card from a person on a limited fixed income expresses reciprocity just as much as an expensive birthday present from someone with no financial restrictions. |
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Issues of reciprocity will arise if, in a country providing an administrative system, services are provided free of charge, while in a country relying on the judicial process equivalent legal assistance is not granted. |
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The return of the collective action can lead to a new organization of civil societies, reactivation of the principle of reciprocity and solidarity and a new distribution between capital and labor. |
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Still, I do believe that Bulgaria needs to remain loyal to the common EU policy and to insist on the application of measures to protect all citizens of the European Union on the basis of reciprocity. |
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In all truth, only the love that unites the free gift of oneself with the impassioned desire for reciprocity instills a joy, which eases the heaviest of burdens. |
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By considering reciprocity as the heart of what it is to be a human being, subsidiarity is the most effective antidote against any form of all-encompassing welfare state. |
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Zambians still value traditional communal ideals such as reciprocity within a household, the extended family, the neighbourhood, the clan, and a formal political system of chieftainship. |
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A vocal supporter of causes such as responsible government and reciprocity with the United States, Johnson gained wide respect as a public speaker, in time becoming leader of the Opposition. |
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By restating and summarizing student responses, teachers ensure that every response is heard, a modelling practice which builds inclusiveness and strengthens a sense of reciprocity. |
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As the election of 1911 approached, the Prime Minister attempted to reunite his factious party by negotiating a treaty of reciprocity with the United States, but he failed. |
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Being in good health and living in a safe neighbourhood are key predictors of community trust and reciprocity, when all the variables are taken into account. |
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However, I regret the fact that the principle of reciprocity, which our group had already firmly supported at the time of the third rail package, should not have been included among the compromises. |
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Biology waves with different frequencies and pulses, together with many physics electron reciprocity, can effectively stimulate the fatness in human body and let the body exercise. |
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The agreements ought to be founded upon equality, probity and reciprocity. |
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What is required is an explicit internationalist movement for global cooperation within an ethos of universal respect, reciprocity and interdependent diversity. |
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Every country should have a basic set of foreign assistance laws allowing international cooperation whenever it serves the national interest, whether based upon reciprocity, comity, ad hoc agreement or conventional treaty. |
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Inferential reciprocity and explanatory non-reciprocity seems to be no different in the case of conditionals than in the case of logical and mathematical equations in general. |
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The Federation was originally established to provide a system of reciprocity through which a young person holding membership of one youth hostel Association may use the hostels in all other countries. |
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Indigenous peoples' values of reciprocity, collectivity, solidarity, reverence for nature and the Earth, among others, should underpin such a world. |
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Others have argued that, rather than modern relationships being defined by an amoral individualism, in fact trust, reciprocity, and equality are defining characteristics of modern relationships. |
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Chairman, you were out of the chair for a split second, but Dr. Dineen invited or urged the committee to study the extensive literature on domestic violence, which shows symmetry and reciprocity in domestic violence. |
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By avoiding both confrontation and homologation, the reciprocity of vocations seems to be a particularly fertile prospect for enriching the ecclesial value of educational communities. |
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These principles underlie the issue of preventing the most serious international crimes from going unpunished, the issue of reciprocity and the issue of the categories of person to whom the arrangements are to apply. |
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It is based on respect, relevance, reciprocity and mutual responsibility. |
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The other Contracting Parties may apply reciprocity. |
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Each agreement is negotiated on an individual basis and the creation of free trade areas with the various Mediterranean countries is progressive, based on reciprocity. |
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He was a heralder of new beginnings, but only on conditions of reciprocity. |
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The right is therefore optional and subject to the rule of reciprocity. |
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The French, Irish and Polish delegations underlined that the EU offer of October 2005 reached the limits of the EU negotiating positions on agriculture and required reciprocity from other WTO members. |
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This is a plan that can only be carried out within the context of the relation and dialogue with the you in a dimension of reciprocity and opening to God. |
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Such a program would act as a magnet to attract top talent to study in Canada as well as promote reciprocity with other OECD countries which provide scholarships for Canadians to study abroad. |
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So to have these exchanges, the reciprocity has been marvelous. |
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Indirect reciprocity can stabilize cooperation without the second-order freerider problem. |
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Instead, exchange of goods and services was based on reciprocity between individuals and among individuals, groups, and Inca rulers. |
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Organization relied on reciprocity and redistribution because these societies had no notion of market or money. |
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In a friendship, reciprocity occurs where the contribution of each party meets the expectations of the other party. |
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This information is obtained with the help of a relation that generalises the reciprocity law for Jacobi's theta functions. |
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Their topics include divisibility, polynomial congruences, quadratic reciprocity, the geometry of numbers, and algebraic integers. |
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The difficulty, then, is how to reconcile that originative asymmetry with anything like the forms of reciprocity or mutuality central to a liberal conception of the socius. |
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For some commentators the former Article 7 of the proposed second directive on credit institutions that dealt with reciprocity was unspokenly directed towards Japan. |
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This reciprocity of approval phenomenon was also documented in subsequent studies by these researchers examining the relationship between tutors and tutees. |
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They were both given and received by those in the highest social level and involved reciprocity, including financial and titulary rewards for loyal service. |
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The practical opposite of reciprocity, Boulwarism, in which one party proposes a single take-it-or-leave-it offer, almost always is perceived as an act of bad faith. |
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Gauss studied these sorts of numbers while attempting to formulate and prove higher order reciprocity laws, following his success with quadratic reciprocity. |
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One can think of the amount of money sent by the trustor as a measure of trust, and of the amount of money returned by the trustee as a measure of reciprocity. |
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Some countries apply the principle of reciprocity in their visa policy. |
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