Academic literature on the topic 'Bark petitions'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bark petitions"

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Machin, Karen, Rosemary O’Neill, and Pat Onions. "Pat’s Petition." Groupwork 23, no. 3 (May 13, 2014): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1921/gpwk.v24i1.774.

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<p><i>Pat’s Petition was originally an e-petition submitted on the UK Government’s website asking the Department for Work and Pensions to ‘stop and review the changes to benefits and services which are falling disproportionately on disabled people, their carers and families’. All e-petitions are submitted by an individual, in this case Pat Onions, and aim to reach 100,000 signatures for the possibility of debate in parliament.</i></p><p><i>Pat’s Petition was a small group formed of volunteers, all with firsthand experience of the issue as disabled people and/or carers, who had no previous experience as a group or in reaching out online to a wider community for petition signatures. The petition reached over 62,600 signatures and ended on November 1<sup>st</sup> 2012. At the time, it was the 12<sup>th</sup> most successful petition out of the 10,294 closed petitions.</i></p><p><i>While the group continues to press for change, it is helpful to reflect on the learning of their first year; specifically the development of the group and the use of e-petitions. This learning may be of use to other campaigners, to people thinking of online campaigning and also to those interested in online groups.</i></p><p><i>This reflective account draws on the experiences of the individuals concerned and the private resource of communications between the group. It looks back on their experience from October 2011 to November 2012 when the petition closed, and reflects on the story of Pat’s Petition.</i></p>
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Peck, Linda Levy. "“For a King not to be bountiful were a fault”: Perspectives on Court Patronage in Early Stuart England." Journal of British Studies 25, no. 1 (January 1986): 31–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/385853.

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In an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery of the work of William Dobson entitled “The Royalists at War,” one portrait among the Cavalier soldiers and commanders was that of Sir Thomas Aylesbury. Aylesbury holds in his hand a document that begins, “To the King's most Excellent Majesty The Humble Petition.” By posing in his official black robes that evoke the solemnity of the law and by giving the petition prominence, Aylesbury celebrates his position as a master of requests. As a master of requests even at Oxford in the 1640s, it was his role to present petitions to the king asking for redress of grievances or for personal advancement, in short, asking for royal bounty. As Dobson's portrait signifies, such petitions were not merely the seedy clamorings of early Stuart courtiers but an open and important link between the monarch and the subject, one suitable for commemoration in portraiture. The painting makes concrete, even in the midst of civil war, the king's traditional role as guarantor of justice and giver of favor. While the king's promise of justice goes back to early Anglo-Saxon dooms and tenth-century coronation oaths, his giving of largesse had expanded with the Renaissance monarchy of the Tudors.Historians of early modern Europe have become interested in court patronage as they have analyzed politics and political elites. From the fifteenth to the eighteenth century, from the work of MacFarlane to Namier, the study of relationships between patrons and clients has been at the forefront of modern historiography.
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King, Nancy J. "Non-Capital Habeas Cases after Appellate Review: An Empirical Analysis." Federal Sentencing Reporter 24, no. 4 (April 1, 2012): 308–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/fsr.2012.24.4.308.

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In 2007, researchers from the National Center for State Courts and Vanderbilt University Law School reported the findings from a study of litigation in 2384 randomly selected, non-capital habeas cases, approximately 6.5% of the non-capital habeas cases commenced in federal district courts in 2003 and 2004 by state prisoners. In this article, I update that report, including the cases that were pending when the 2007 report was prepared, following the study cases into the federal courts of appeals, and back into the state courts. Even after appellate review of denials and dismissals, the percentage of non-capital petitioners receiving federal habeas relief remains less than the 1% rate reported prior to AEDPA. Descriptive findings include appeals and requests to file successive petitions by circuit, and rulings on certificates of appealability by circuit. Detailed information regarding each case receiving relief in federal court is also included.
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Janzen, Philip. "“LookingForwardAlways toAfrica”:William George Emanuel and the Politics of Repatriation in Cuba, 1894–1906." Americas 78, no. 1 (January 2021): 37–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/tam.2020.40.

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AbstractThis article examines a back-to-Africa movement from early twentieth-century Cuba. The leader, William George Emanuel, arrived in Cuba from Antigua in 1894, and over the next several years, he worked to unite thecabildos de naciónandsociedades de coloron the island. After independence in 1898, Emanuel and his followers rejected Cuban citizenship and began petitioning Britain, the United States, Belgium, and the Gold Coast for land grants in West and Central Africa. Each petition, however, told a different story. Emanuel skillfully tailored his appeals according to his audience, variously claiming that he and his followers were “British,” “African,” “Congolese,” or “Mina,” among other identities. Anticipating the rise of Marcus Garvey by over a decade, Emanuel's campaign reveals an overlooked pan-Africanist strand in the typical narrative for this period of Cuban history. Drawing mainly on the petitions themselves, the article analyzes how Emanuel blended the languages of empire, nation, race, and ethnicity to create a dynamic pan-African identity. More generally, the article demonstrates how marginalized groups have long negotiated the boundaries of identity in the pursuit of belonging.
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Hare, Christopher. "BANKER’S LIABILITY FOR POST-PETITION DISPOSITIONS." Cambridge Law Journal 60, no. 3 (November 21, 2001): 441–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008197301301198.

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Once a petition to wind-up a company has been presented, a balance must be struck between two competing interests. On the one hand, the allegedly insolvent company must be allowed to continue trading until the court has had an opportunity to examine the bien-fondé of the petition; on the other hand, the company’s directors must be prevented from dealing with the corporate assets in a way detrimental to the interests of the general creditors. This balance is struck by the Insolvency Act 1986, s. 127, which provides that, upon the granting of a winding-up order, any “dispositions” of the company’s property in the period following the presentation of the petition are retrospectively avoided, unless the court orders otherwise. The courts have, however, had considerable difficulty in applying this provision to the post-petition operation of a company’s current account and, in particular, have failed to adopt a consistent approach to the potential liability of a bank for continuing to operate such an account. The Court of Appeal addressed this problem in Hollicourt (Contracts) Ltd. v. Bank of Ireland [2001] 2 W.L.R. 290.
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Monson, Jamie. "Defending the People's Railway in the Era of Liberalization: TAZARA in Southern Tanzania." Africa 76, no. 1 (February 2006): 113–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/afr.2006.0004.

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AbstractWhen the services of the TAZARA railway in Tanzania were threatened with cutbacks in the 1980s and 1990s, rural community leaders wrote petitions of protest to district–level officials. In these petitions, they complained that railway decision–making was being guided by profit–making rather than nation–building priorities in response to pressure from the IMF and the World Bank. The railway had abandoned its original role as a servant of the people, they argued, employing the language of socialism, nationhood and pan–African solidarity that had been utilized by the state during the construction era in the 1970s. Yet the railway services sought by these local communities had facilitated their own entry into profit–seeking behaviour as entrepreneurs in the TAZARA corridor. The transition from socialism to liberalization along the TAZARA railway was therefore a negotiated process in which the meaning of concepts such as ‘privatization’, ‘profit’ and ‘freedom’ were contested.
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Teeter, Emily. "Amunhotep Son of Hapu at Medinet Habu." Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 81, no. 1 (December 1995): 232–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030751339508100127.

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Publication of a fragmentary gilded limestone statue of a seated figure holding an unrolled papyrus. The statue, Chicago OIM 14321, excavated at Medinet Habu, is identified as Amunhotep son of Hapu. The inscriptions on the back pillar and the papyrus suggest that the figure was an intercessory through which petitions could be relayed to the god Amun. Demotic texts, graffiti, and small finds, provide evidence that a cult of Amunhotep son of Hapu flourished at Medinet Habu in the Ptolemaic Period.
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Carpenter, Daniel, and Benjamin Schneer. "Party Formation through Petitions: The Whigs and the Bank War of 1832–1834." Studies in American Political Development 29, no. 2 (October 2015): 213–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0898588x15000073.

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When President Andrew Jackson removed the public deposits from the Bank of the United States, he set off an economic and political crisis from which, scholars agree, the Whig Party emerged. We argue that petitioning in response to removal of the deposits shaped the emergence of the Whig Party, crystallizing a new line of Jacksonian opposition and dispensing with older lines of National Republican rhetoric and organization. Where petitioning against removal of the deposits was higher, the Whigs were more likely to emerge with organization and votes in the coming years. We test this implication empirically by using a new database of petitions sent to Congress during the banking crisis. We find that petitioning activity in 1834 is predictive of increased support for Whig Party candidates in subsequent presidential elections as well as stronger state Whig Party organization.
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Effendi, Cucu Susilawati. "The Analysis of Obligation Disputes on Returned Partnership Funds in Religious High Court of Medan." International Journal of Nusantara Islam 5, no. 2 (February 6, 2018): 174–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.15575/ijni.v5i2.1917.

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This research is motivated by the partnership dispute on financing contract between PT. Bank Sumut Syariah;Branch Padang sidimpuan and Rip. Ongku Sutan Harahap. its dispute was occurred after the customer death,and so on causing the termination of the financing installment, because the financing is not covered by the insurance, so the bank asks the heir to be responsible for completing the remaining installment of the financing. The settlement of the dispute is settled through a litigation under the agreement of both parties to the dispute. The results of this study obtained that, PT. Bank Sumut Syariah Branch of Padangsidimpuan has neglected to apply the principle of prudence in the musyarakah (partnership) financing contract, namely disbursing financing funds without first being insured. Therefore, the Panel of Judges of Medan Religious Court granted the heirs' petition. But the decision was canceled by the Medan High Religious Court, because the Panel of Judges found a formal defect in the form of obscuur libel, error in persona, disqualification in person. The formal defect resulted in the lawsuit not being accepted or N.O. (Niet Ontvankelijk verklaard). With the verdict N.O (Niet Ontvankelijk verklaard), the case becomes the quo status, it means back to its original state. Thus, the partnership (musyarakah) financing contract will remain valid and binding on both parties, their rights and obligations must be implemented in accordance with the contract.
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Belchem, John. "The Preston Cock, Adultery, Homophobia and the First Petition for Female Suffrage." Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire: Volume 170, Issue 1 170, no. 1 (January 1, 2021): 53–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/transactions.170.7.

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Originally spurred by determination to bring the Manchester authorities to justice in the aftermath of the Peterloo massacre, Henry Hunt persisted in seeking to gain election for the popular constituency of Preston. Eventually successful in 1830, he entered parliament pledged to present every petition sent to him, including that from Mary Smith calling for female suffrage. Having provided a rational vindication of the rights of women, her petition descended into a diatribe against married men who indulged in homosexual acts to the despair of their suicidal wives. This was a thinly veiled reference to alleged goings on in the household of the radical journalist William Cobbett. This article seeks to place in context the allegations and subsequent heated controversy by examining the long-term relationship between Hunt and Cobbett, dating back to the early nineteenth century and their mutual conversion from loyalism to radicalism. Already strained by the longstanding animus of Cobbett’s wife towards Hunt on account of his adulterous domestic circumstances, the radical allies were increasingly at odds in the years after Peterloo, divided over political and personal issues in a bewildering and increasingly unrestrained manner. Jealous of Hunt’s electoral success at Preston and furious with his radical condemnation of the Reform Bill, Cobbett inveighed against the ‘Preston Cock’. Hunt responded in kind, repeating allegations soon taken up in Mary Smith’s petition. Historians have simply noted how the petition was greeted with derision, but as this article shows, it merits deeper study. An early milestone on the long journey to secure votes for women, Mary Smith’s petition reveals political, personal and sexual divisions in early nineteenth-century radicalism - over feminism, homosexuality and adultery - attitudes and prejudices which inhibited any decisive pre-Victorian advance beyond manhood suffrage. The article concludes with a postscript noting Hunt’s fall from favour as the Reform Bill was passed, losing his Preston seat in the first election under the new propertied franchise. He died shortly thereafter but was rehabilitated and revered a few years later by the Chartists. His presentation of the first petition for female suffrage has seemingly been lost from history.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bark petitions"

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Schwarz, Janien (Nien), and n. schwarz@ecu edu au. "Beyond Familiar Territory: Dissertation: De-centering the Centre (An analysis of visual strategies in the art of Robert Smithson, Alfredo Jaar and the Bark Petitions of Yirrkala); and Studio Report: A Sculptural Response to Mapping, Mining, and Consumption." The Australian National University. Sculpture and Art Theory, 1999. http://thesis.anu.edu.au./public/adt-ANU20010703.110608.

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Dissertation: "Beyond Familiar Territory" researches various visual and conceptual strategies that facilitate connection between urban-based audiences and peripheral areas of ground where the extraction of mineral resources occurs. The Dissertation is a comparative analysis of selected works by Robert Smithson, Alfredo Jaar, and the Bark Petitions of the Yirrkala people in North East Arnhem Land. The focus is on how these artists have endeavoured to challenge urban audiences, disrupt the perceived hierarchy between centre and periphery, and bridge gaps between urban sites of mineral consumption and overlooked sites of mineral extraction. ¶"Beyond Familiar Territory" takes the form of this Dissertation (33%), and an exhibition of works at the Canberra Museum and Gallery (CMAG) from 6 February to 21 March, 1999, which, together with the Studio report, documents the outcome of the Studio Practice Component (67%). ¶ Report: "Beyond Familiar Territory" researches various visual and conceptual strategies that facilitate connection between urban-based audiences and peripheral areas of ground where the extraction of mineral resources occurs. To decentre the self-importance and perceived inclusiveness of urban centres by bridging gaps or facilitating insight between a centre of mineral extraction and production and a centre of mineral consumption. The Dissertation entails a comparative analysis of strategies used by Robert Smithson, Alfredo Jaar, and the Yirrkala Bark Petition painters, and analyses how these artists have perceived their relationships as mediators or facilitators between mining sites (and associated activities) and urban centres of consumption. ¶ "Beyond Familiar Territory" takes the form of an exhibition of works at the Canberra Museum and Gallery (CMAG) from 6 February to 21 March, 1999, which comprises the outcome of the Studio Practice Component (67%), together with a Dissertation (33%), and the Report which documents the nature of the course of study.
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Eggerking, Kitty. "Landmarks: reading the Gove Peninsula." Phd thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/11613.

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This thesis investigates the events leading up to and including the first land rights case, Milirrpum v Nabalco, heard in the Northern Territory Supreme Court before Justice Blackburn in 1970. It examines how the Yolngu people of the Yirrkala mission responded to the federal government’s leasing of the Gove Peninsula for the mining of bauxite, initially by seeking a political solution and subsequently legal redress. Thus, it considers events such as the bark petitions the people of Yirrkala sent to the federal parliament in 1963 and the subsequent inquiry by a select committee of the House of Representatives into Yolngu grievances. While these events are reasonably well known, the thesis situates them in fresh and appropriate political contexts. For instance, it takes into account the instability of the Menzies government in 1963; and, further, it examines the relevant parliamentary standing orders to show that the bark petitions were in order but the then Minister for Territories was out of order in ‘rejecting’ the first petition. As well as these known events, the thesis also brings to light many other hitherto unreported events and matters. These events — and especially the actual Gove case — represent key moments for inspecting the contest of Indigenous and non-Indigenous systems of knowledge or world views, and this is the key reason for undertaking the study. To chart a course through the two disparate traditions, much of the focus is on the ways that land is conceptualised.
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Schwarz, Janien (Nien). "Beyond Familiar Territory: Dissertation: De-centering the Centre (An analysis of visual strategies in the art of Robert Smithson, Alfredo Jaar and the Bark Petitions of Yirrkala); and Studio Report: A Sculptural Response to Mapping, Mining, and Consumption." Phd thesis, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/49354.

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Dissertation: "Beyond Familiar Territory" researches various visual and conceptual strategies that facilitate connection between urban-based audiences and peripheral areas of ground where the extraction of mineral resources occurs. The Dissertation is a comparative analysis of selected works by Robert Smithson, Alfredo Jaar, and the Bark Petitions of the Yirrkala people in North East Arnhem Land. The focus is on how these artists have endeavoured to challenge urban audiences, disrupt the perceived hierarchy between centre and periphery, and bridge gaps between urban sites of mineral consumption and overlooked sites of mineral extraction. ¶ "Beyond Familiar Territory" takes the form of this Dissertation (33%), and an exhibition of works at the Canberra Museum and Gallery (CMAG) from 6 February to 21 March, 1999, which, together with the Studio report, documents the outcome of the Studio Practice Component (67%).¶ ...
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Books on the topic "Bark petitions"

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Fiji. Parliament. House of Representatives. Select Committee on the Mohammed Anwar Khan Petition. Report of the Select Committee on the Mohammed Anwar Khan Petition. Suva, Fiji: Govt. Printer, 1995.

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Malpiede, Marjorie Molloy. Reversing public opinion: The defeat of the tax roll-back petition of 1990. [Boston]: University of Massachusetts at Boston, 1992.

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London. Corporation. Public Relations Office. Docklands railway link to Bank): Summary of City of London corporation's petition against LRT bill. (London: The Corporation, 1986.

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Commercial National Bank In Shreveport Petitioner. Gale, U.S. Supreme Court Records, 2011.

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Como, David R. Print House, Petitions, and Provinces. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199541911.003.0010.

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This chapter analyzes the rise of an “independent coalition,” which emerged out of the growing religious controversy afflicting parliament’s cause by early 1644. New religious ideas—including sharpened arguments for religious toleration and more extreme attacks on the validity of existing church forms—began to spread in press and pulpit, resulting in a clampdown on publishing, which in turn further exacerbated tensions. The chapter charts the spread of religious conflict into parliament’s armies and from London to the provinces, examining a series of petitions, maneuvers, and mobilizations that revealed the creeping advance of religious disputes, and the ways those disputes migrated back and forth between London and the countryside. This, in turn, reveals the ligatures of an emerging “independent” political alliance, with nodes across England. More generally, the analysis suggests that conditions of civil war were creating a national political environment conducive to widespread, integrated, partisan politics.
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Security State Bank Of Pharr Texas Petitioner. Gale, U.S. Supreme Court Records, 2011.

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Horne, Gerald. “We Charge Genocide”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037924.003.0009.

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This chapter explores Patterson's genocide petition, which was a devastating indictment of the U.S. authorities' complicity and dereliction in lynching, murder, deprivation of voting rights, and all manner of crimes. Ominously for Washington, the petition virtually invited the international community to intervene forcefully in what had been seen traditionally as an internal U.S. affair. By early 1952, Patterson claimed that as a result of this petition, “the international offensive against racist terror” in his homeland had “reached unprecedented heights.” When Eleanor Roosevelt felt compelled to disparage the petition, it suggested that the campaign could not be ignored easily. Even in Seattle, which had been thought to be a liberal citadel, the public library banned the genocide book, while the public-school system sought to bar the CRC from renting an auditorium.
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Michigan National Bank A National Banking Association Petitioner. Gale, U.S. Supreme Court Records, 2011.

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City National Bank And Trust Company Trustee Etc Petitioner. Gale, U.S. Supreme Court Records, 2011.

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Dick, Alexander. Answers for Sir Alexander Dick of Priestfield [sic], Bart. to the Petition of James Earl of Abercorn. Gale Ecco, Print Editions, 2018.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bark petitions"

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Goss, W. M., Claire Hooker, and Ronald D. Ekers. "The Final Year, 1962." In Historical & Cultural Astronomy, 695–719. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-07916-0_40.

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AbstractI.I. Rabi, President of Associated Universities, Inc in New York to Wild on 20 August 1962:On 26 January 1962, Pawsey began organising a 1-month stay in Green Bank for March, an orientation visit. After the US, he planned to go to Paris to visit his daughter Margaret and her family, then continue back to Sydney via India. He hoped to arrive back in Sydney by 24 April 1962, Hastings Pawsey’s 17th birthday. As expected, Pawsey arranged his trip to the US and Europe in order to meet colleagues. In Pasadena on the way to New York, Green Bank and Washington, he planned to meet Gordon Stanley and Otto Struve. Later he was to meet Rabi in Boston in early March, just before his visit to Green Bank, which was to start about 20 March. These plans were outlined in a letter to Rabi on 26 January 1962, explaining that his home base in the US would his brother-in-law’s (Ted Nicoll) house in Princeton, New Jersey. Pawsey wrote:On 31 January 1962, Rabi replied, again with a handwritten letter: “I have set the machinery in train to help with your visit to make you an [NRAO] employee during the period [March-April] … Your visit will come at a crucial time [for the 140-foot telescope].” On the same day, Charles Dunbar, Secretary of AUI, wrote Pawsey with the details of the temporary visa process, the filing of a petition for permission to import a non-immigrant alien. Since Pawsey was “an alien of distinguished merit and ability”, the expectation was that the process would go smoothly. In fact, within 2 weeks, the NSF reported to AUI (15 February 1961, Dunbar to Pawsey) that “our petition to import you from Australia has been granted by [Immigration and Naturalisation Service]”. Dunbar was surprised: “I had no idea that such rapid action could be secured.”
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Gollmann, Dieter. "From Access Control to Trust Management, and Back – A Petition." In Trust Management V, 1–8. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-22200-9_1.

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Guoqiang, Dong, and Andrew G. Walder. "Backlash." In A Decade of Upheaval, 137–55. Princeton University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691213217.003.0007.

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This chapter studies Zhang Liansheng's petition, which laid out Paolian's complaints about its persecution at the hands of the People's Armed Department (PAD). Zhang coordinated with the other petitioners from Feng County, several of whom were from rural communes, to collect information about the crackdowns and the violations of central policy in the recent campaigns. As these events were taking place, shifts in Jiangsu's political situation created more favorable circumstances for the petitioners' cause, while threatening to weaken Shao Wen's position back in the county. The shift in Jiangsu's political tides, which favored the petitioners' cause and ultimately the Paolian faction, had the seemingly paradoxical effect of sharpening local conflicts and reviving the factional animosities between Liansi and Paolian. From early June through October of 1974, the conflicts became sharper, and the two sides organized.
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"Bars to nullity petitions." In Family & Matrimonial Law, 55–58. Routledge-Cavendish, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781843143871-15.

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Hart, James S. "The Long Parliament (i): looking back." In Justice Upon Petition, 64–105. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003102519-3.

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"The Long Parliament (i): looking back." In Justice Upon Petition, 64–99. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203400593-8.

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"Back Matter." In Petitions and Strategies of Persuasion in the Middle Ages, 221. Boydell & Brewer, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1qv2z9.19.

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Couper, Charles Tennant. "Petition For Bail." In Report of the Trial of the Directors and the Manager of the City of Glasgow Bank, 1–25. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003050476-1.

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Kretzmer, David, and Yaël Ronen. "Gaza After 2005." In The Occupation of Justice, 163–78. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190696023.003.0009.

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In 2005 Israel withdrew its forces and civilian population from Gaza, and declared that it no longer exercises effective control over the area. At the same time Israel still maintains control over many aspects of life in Gaza, including movement of persons and passage of goods and services. This chapter examines the Court’s approach in petitions relating to Gaza and its residents since the withdrawal. It reviews the Court’s decisions on the application of the law of belligerent occupation to Israel’s actions in Gaza. The chapter discusses the Court’s approach in petitions by Gaza residents who wish to enter Israel or travel through Israel in order to reach the West Bank for medical or other reasons.
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Kretzmer, David, and Yaël Ronen. "Jurisdiction and Justiciability." In The Occupation of Justice, 29–40. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190696023.003.0002.

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This chapter describes the basis for the Court’s jurisdiction over petitions by residents of territory that is not the sovereign territory of Israel, but is ruled under a regime of belligerent occupation. The chapter examines the readiness of the Court to entertain such petitions, given that their subject matter falls within areas that are arguably non-justiciable. The chapter stresses the tension in the Court’s decisions created by its position that the legality of Israel’s most controversial policy in the West Bank—the settlement project—is not justiciable, and its ruling that the political nature of a government act cannot block the right of individuals to challenge the legality of acts that violate their rights.
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Conference papers on the topic "Bark petitions"

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Aji Pambudi, Setyo. "Adulthood Online Activism, Study Case Change.org Petition - Membatalkan Kebijakan Baru Pencairan Dana JHT (Jaminan Hari Tua) Minimal 10 Tahun." In International Post-Graduate Conference on Media and Communication. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0007328402960302.

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