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1

N, Somero George, ed. Biochemical adaptation: Mechanism and process in physiological evolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.

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2

Hausa in the Sudan: Process of adaptation to Arabic. Köln: Köppe, 1999.

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3

Fulfulde in the Sudan: Process of adaptation to Arabic. Berlin: D. Reimer, 1986.

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4

Lamothe, Serge. Le Procès de Kafka. [Québec]: Alto, 2005.

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5

A, Andrews Heather, ed. The Roy adaptation model. Stamford, Conn: Appleton & Lange, 1999.

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6

Roy, Callista. The Roy adaptation model. 3rd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2008.

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7

Lopata, Cynthia L. The cooperative implementation of information technology: A process of mutual adaptation. Ann Arbor, Mich: University Microfilms International, 1993.

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8

Vrontis, Demetris. Integrating adaptation and standardisation in international marketing: The AdaptStand modelling process. Manchester: Manchester Metropolitan University, Business School, 2001.

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9

Indian Network of Ethics and Climate Change. Climate change and grassroots adaptation process: Case studies of 5 ecosystems. Visakhapatnam: Indian Network on Ethics and Climate Change, 2012.

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10

Vrontis, Demetris. Integrating adaptation and standardisation in international marketing: The AdaptStand modelling process. Manchester: Business School, 2001.

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11

H, Eriksen Siri, ed. Mainstreaming adaptation to climate change in the development process in Uganda. Nairobi: Acts Press, African Centre for Technology Studies, 2005.

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12

Levin, Dmitriy. Management of transportation process technology on Railways. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/22262.

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The issues of adaptation of regulatory and technological documents to the actual situation of the transportation process, creating optimal working conditions for sections, stations and freight fronts, solving problems of technology management and timely response to deviations from regulatory and technological documents are considered. It is intended for employees of the railway industry, researchers, developers of automated control systems, students of advanced training courses and University students.
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13

Portes, Alejandro. Adaptation process of Cuban (Mariel) and Haitian refugees in South Florida, 1983-1987. Ann Arbor, Mich: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, 1992.

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14

Per, Lundberg, ed. Pillars of evolution: Fundamental principles of the eco-ecolutionary process. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.

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15

Lighthall, Frederick F. Local realities, local adaptations: Problem, process, and person in a school's governance. London: Falmer, 1989.

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16

Lighthall, Frederick F. Local realities, local adaptations: Problem, process, and person in a school's governance. London: Falmer Press, 1989.

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17

Franz Kafka/Orson Welles: Il processo. Soveria Mannelli: Rubbettino, 2010.

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18

The mourning-liberation process. Madison, Conn: International Universities Press, 1989.

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19

Kosonen, Riitta. Governance, the local regulation process, and enterprise adaptation in post-socialism: The case of Vyborg. Helsinki: Helsinki School of Economics, 2002.

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20

Merino, Noël. The election process. Detroit, MI: Greenhaven Press, 2012.

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21

R, Tuttle Naomi, ed. Self-esteem and adjusting with blindness: The process of responding to life's demands. 2nd ed. Springfield, Ill: Charles C Thomas Publisher, 1996.

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22

Mineva, Oksana, Elena Gadzhieva, Diana Smirnova, and Svetlana Arutyunyan. Management of social adaptation and motivation to the development of modern society. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1002556.

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The textbook is a systematic exposition of the issues associated with the management of social adaptation and motivation to the development of modern society. Discusses the current problems of adaptation for socially excluded segments of the population (migrants, persons living with HIV and their families, the disabled, families of prisoners and individuals released from places of imprisonment, etc.), the role of civil society, business and ordinary citizens in the process of socialization. Meets the requirements of Federal state educational standards of higher education of the last generation. For graduate students enrolled in the direction of preparation "personnel Management", faculty and graduate students of economic universities, students of retraining and advanced training of specialists and executives as well as entrepreneurs.
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23

Liturgies of the future: The process and methods of inculturation. New York: Paulist Press, 1989.

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24

Novotná, Tereza. How Germany unified and the EU enlarged: Negotiating the accession through transplantation and adaptation. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.

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25

Wael Salah El Din Ahmed Fahmi. The adaptation process of a resettled community to the newly-built environment: A study of the Nubian experience in Egypt. Manchester: University of Manchester, 1993.

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26

Meyer, Benjamin. Measuring, Modeling and Simulating the Re-adaptation Process of the Human Visual System after Short-Time Glares in Traffic Scenarios. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-14704-4.

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27

Mental health in late life: The adaptive process. Boston: Jones and Bartlett, 1986.

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28

Razov, Pavel, and Sergey Evenko. The risks of social adaptation of servicemen transferred to the reserve, to the conditions of civilian life in Russia and strategies to overcome them. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1078930.

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It analyzes the risks of social adaptation to civil life in Russia — one of the main difficulties of servicemen transferred to the reserve — as well as strategies to overcome them. The urgency of studying this problem by sociologists due to the importance of sociological understanding of specific social adaptation of discharged military personnel and caused by the process problems, because their solution depends not only social and professional well-being of the social group, but also the status of the military in Russian society, the prestige of military service, much lower in the post-Soviet period. Designed for graduate students, researchers interested in the sociology of risk.
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29

Wijaya, Mahendra. Proses adaptasi dalam perubahan pola tanam dan pola-pola konsumsi pada petani transmigran Rawajitu, Lampung Utara: Laporan penelitian = Adaptation process in transition agriculture and consumption pattern at transmigran [sic] peasant Rawajitu, Nort[h] Lampung. Surakarta: Fakultas Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik, Universitas Sebelas Maret, 1997.

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30

Tagliaferre, Lewis. Recovery from loss: A personalized guide to the grieving process. Deerfield Beach, Fla: Health Communications, 1990.

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31

Smit, Barry. CAVIAR (Community adaptation and vulnerability in Arctic regions): Framework document for an International Polar Year consortium. Guelph, Ont: University of Guelph, Dept. of Geography, 2008.

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32

Witte, Johanna Katharina. Change of degrees and degrees of change: Comparing adaptations of European higher education systems in the context of the Bologna process. Enschede: CHEPS, Center for Higher Education Policy Studies, 2006.

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33

1951-, Kriegman Daniel H., ed. The adaptive design of the human psyche: Psychoanalysis, evolutionary biology, and the therapeutic process. New York: Guilford Press, 1992.

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34

Pantev, Plamen. Civil-military relations in South-East Europe: A survey of the national perspectives and of the adaptation process to the Partnership For Peace standards. Vienna: Institut für Internationale Friedenssicherung, 2001.

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35

Johnson, Julie Tallard. Hidden victims: An eight-stage healing process for families and friends of the mentally ill. New York: Doubleday, 1988.

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36

Akateva, Marina, and Svetlana Beskorovaynaya. Theoretical and methodological assessment of accounting and reporting adaptation processes in the context of global integration of Russian and international legislation. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1080624.

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The monograph is devoted to the fundamental scientific, theoretical, organizational and methodological issues of harmonization of accounting and reporting of Russian economic entities, understanding and professional assessment, including in the retrospective aspect. For postgraduates, undergraduates and students of the financial and economic direction. The materials of the monograph can be used in the educational process as part of teaching a number of accounting, financial and legal disciplines, as well as for further research in the field of accounting science and practice.
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37

Bieda, Bogusław. Stochastic Analysis in Production Process and Ecology Under Uncertainty. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012.

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38

Boyd, Brian. Making Adaptation Studies Adaptive. Edited by Thomas Leitch. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199331000.013.34.

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An evolutionary (or “adaptationist”) perspective on adaptation studies offers ways past the “fidelity discourse” that has long vexed adaptation scholars. Biological adaptation forgoes exact fidelity to solve the new problems posed by inevitably changing environments, in a process that is fertile as well as faithful. Artistic adaptation also looks two ways, toward retention or fidelity and toward innovation or fertility. The complex and multiple adaptations and hybridizations of art and nature, of page, stage, screen, and painting in Nabokov’s 1969 novel Ada suggest that the more exactly you know your world, or the world of art, the more you can transform them as you wish. Charlie Kaufman’s 2002 screenplay Adaptation. resembles Ada not only in spotlighting orchids but also in being meta-adaptational, addressing, like Ada, both fidelity within adaptation and the creative fertility to be found in building on prior design but moving beyond fidelity.
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39

Redmon, Allen H., ed. Next Generation Adaptation. University Press of Mississippi, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496832603.001.0001.

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Next Generation Adaptation: Spectatorship and Process explores the ways in which cross-cultural adaptations often stage a collusion between competing cultural capital. The collusion conceals and reveals commonalities and differences between these cultural traditions before giving way to the differences that can distinguish one textual expression from another, just as it ultimately distinguishes one set of readers from another. An adaptation of any sort, but especially those that cross accepted stereotypes, or geographic or political boundaries, provide spectators space to negotiate attitudes and ideas that might otherwise lay latent in the text. Spectators are left to parse through each, often with special attention to the differences that exist between two expressions. Each new set of readers, each generation, distinguishes itself from an earlier set of readers, even as they exist along the same family tree. Given enough time, some new shared organizing strategy emerges until a new encounter or new expression of a text restarts the adaptational process every adaptation can trigger. Taken together, the chapters in Next Generation Adaptation each argue that the texts they consider foreground the kinds of space that exists between texts, between political commitments, between ethical obligations that every filmic text can open when the text is experienced as an adaptation. The chapters esteem the expansive dialogue adaptations accelerate when they realize their capacity to bring together two or more texts, two or more peoples, two or more ideologies without allowing one expression to erase another.
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40

Hunter, I. Q. Adaptation XXX. Edited by Thomas Leitch. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199331000.013.24.

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Pornographic adaptations—erotic parodies of mainstream films—have long been dismissed from critical notice as much because of their allegedly slapdash adaptation strategies as because of their demotic cultural associations. Focusing mostly on commercially produced US films, Chapter 24 traces the history of pornographic adaptations from the softcore exploitation films of the 1960s through “Golden Age” hardcore films such as The Opening of Misty Beethoven (1976) to contemporary DVD and online “XXX versions” and looks in detail at porn versions of Fanny Hill and Psycho (1960). The essay explores how far such film adaptations uncover disavowed erotic subtexts in their sources and considers what the process of porn adaptation can reveal about the more general processes of producing and consuming adaptations.
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41

Corrigan, Timothy. Defining Adaptation. Edited by Thomas Leitch. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199331000.013.1.

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Chapter 1 identifies three approaches to and perspectives on adaptation: as process, as product, and as reception. At different times in the long history of adaptation practices, these dimensions have been associated, at different times, with prominent models found in science and biology, literature and writing, commerce and art, technology and theories of representation. Through the course of this history, different models of adaptation have in turn mobilized and defined adaptation in relation to three primary motifs and formulas: adaptation as an evolutionary process, as a product whose relation to a source is based in fidelity or infidelity, and as intertextual relations engaged through reception.
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42

Somero, George N., and Peter W. Hochachka. Biochemical Adaptation: Mechanism and Process in Physiological Evolution. Oxford University Press, USA, 2002.

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43

Somero, George N., and Peter W. Hochachka. Biochemical Adaptation: Mechanism and Process in Physiological Evolution. Oxford University Press, USA, 2001.

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44

Elliott, Kamilla. Theorizing Adaptation. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197511176.001.0001.

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Asking why adaptation has been seen as more problematic to theorize than other humanities subjects, and why it has been more theoretically problematic in the humanities than in the sciences and social sciences, Theorizing Adaptation seeks to both explicate and redress “the problem of theorizing adaptation” through a metacritical history of theorizing adaptation from the late sixteenth century to the present, a metatheoretical theory of the relationship between theorization and adaptation in the humanities, and analysis of and experimentation with the rhetoric of theorizing adaptation. Adaptation was not always the bad theoretical object that it increasingly became from the late eighteenth century: in earlier centuries, adaptation was celebrated and valued as a means of aesthetic and cultural progress. Tracing the falling fortunes of adaptation under humanities theorization, the history nevertheless locates dissenting voices valorizing adaptation in every period. Adaptation studies can learn from history not only how to theorize adaptation more positively, but also to consider “the problem of theorization” for adaptation. The metatheoretical section finds that theorization and adaptation are rival, overlapping, inimical processes, each seeking to remake culture—and each other—in their images. It is not simply the case that adaptation has to adapt to theorization: rather, theorization needs to adapt to and through adaptation. The final section attends to the rhetoric of theorizing adaptation, analyzing how tiny pieces of rhetoric have constructed adaptation’s relationship to theorization, and turning to figurative rhetoric, or figuration, as a third process that can mediate between adaptation and theorization and refigure their relationship.
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45

Lev, Peter. How to Write Adaptation History. Edited by Thomas Leitch. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199331000.013.38.

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The scholarship on American film adaptations is surprisingly ahistorical, neglecting the institutional and production history of Hollywood film. Chapter 38 attempts a more historical approach. Concentrating on the 1930s, it discusses how stories were chosen, what kinds of stories were chosen, and how stories were shaped in the film production process, identifying the screenwriter and the supervising producer as key contributors to adaptation. Statistical tables provide information on the percentage of novel, play, and short story adaptations made in each year between 1931 and 1940. Critiquing both the auteur theory and Robert Stam’s intertextuality for their lack of interest in production history, the essay calls for more archival research and more attention to the production process.
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46

Wilhite, Keith. Adaptation and Revision. Edited by Thomas Leitch. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199331000.013.37.

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Chapter 37 uses the process of revision—revisiting the ideas of oneself or others in order to produce a new response—to explore the relations between adaptation studies and academic writing. It argues that adaptation provides a theoretical framework that encourages students to question such established writing categories as author, reader, text, plagiarism, and revision, and that adaptation clarifies the processes and stakes of the practical moves students perform through reading, interpretation, writing, and rewriting. The essay concludes by examining the ways foundational ideas in adaptation studies can help students working on revisions of their earlier drafts to think of their instructors, their peers, and themselves as critical readers and translators of their own ideas.
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47

(Editor), Angela Simon Staab, and Linda Compton Hodges (Editor), eds. Essentials of Gerontological Nursing: Adaptation to the Aging Process. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 1996.

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48

Pennington, Virginia Roach. REACTIVE-ADAPTATION PROCESS: AN INTEGRATED THEORY OF NURSING BEHAVIORS. 1986.

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49

Simon, Staab Angela, and Hodges Linda Compton, eds. Essentials of gerontological nursing: Adaptation to the aging process. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1996.

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50

Cronin, Bernadette, Rachel MagShamhráin, and Nikolai Preuschoff. Adaptation Considered as a Collaborative Art: Process and Practice. Palgrave Macmillan, 2020.

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