Academic literature on the topic 'Birds – Miscellanea'

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Journal articles on the topic "Birds – Miscellanea"

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Zaradija Kiš, Antonija. ""CVÊTЬ VSAKE MUDROSTI" U TKONSKOM ZBORNIKU: O LUNJI I ZAVISTI." Croatica : časopis za hrvatski jezik, književnost i kulturu 43, no. 63 (2019): 7–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.17234/croatica.63.1.

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VAUGHAN, Steven. "Differentiation and Dysfunction: An Exploration of Post-Legislative Guidance Practices in 14 EU Agencies." Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies 17 (June 29, 2015): 66–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cel.2015.3.

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AbstractThis paper offers up a map of self-authored post-legislative guidance practice among the EU’s decentralised agencies. It shows that the use of guidance by EU agencies is widespread and significant, but not pervasive in that 14 of the EU’s 33 agencies currently engage in guidance-making. Where guidance is produced, it varies significantly between and within agencies as regards volume and length. These documents are hard to find, they are called a miscellany of different things, and there seems to have sprung up, ad hoc, a hierarchy of guidance that is both interesting and lacking in clarity. The question as to whether such guidance binds those to whom it has been addressed has been fudged, with agencies and courts engaging in exercises of tautology and misdirection to avoid the appearance of anything that looks like binding norm-making by the EU’s agencies. Consultation and participation in the making of guidance seems lackadaisical. This map suggests a level of differentiation that is so ill-thought out, and so ad hoc, so lacking in foresight and oversight, as to be dysfunctional. At the same time, the lack of engagement by the EU courts with these norms suggests that the site of opportunity for a way forward in this area lies other than with the judiciary.
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Books on the topic "Birds – Miscellanea"

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Martin, Brian P. World birds. Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Books, 1987.

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Hibbert, Clare. Birds. London: Franklin Watts, 2011.

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Ganeri, Anita. Birds. London: Gloucester Press, 1993.

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Ganeri, Anita. Birds. New York: F. Watts, 1992.

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Bédoyère, Camilla De la. Birds. Bardfield End Green, Thaxted, Essex, UK: Miles Kelly Publishing Ltd, 2014.

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Philip, Steele. Birds. New York: Crestwood House, 1991.

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Philip, Steele. Birds. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: J. Messner, 1991.

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Gray, Samantha. Birds. London: DK, 2002.

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Erickson, Laura. For the birds: An uncommon guide. Duluth, Minn: Pfeifer-Hamilton, 1994.

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Levine, Stuart P. Birds FYI. New York, NY: HarperCollins Pub., 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Birds – Miscellanea"

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Basu, Kaushik. "By Debt If Need Be." In An Economist's Miscellany, 239–43. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190120894.003.0012.

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Shibram Chakraborty was a celebrated Bengali writer who fought for India’s independence, and, as a result, did time in jail. Thereafter, he lived a bachelor in a single-room rented apartment, filling up both paper and walls with his writings. His writings were celebrated for humour, alliteration, and a satirical strain. This chapter is a translation into English by the author of this book of one of Shibram’s most celebrated short stories on indebtedness and loan juggling. Quite apart from the delightful humour that binds this tale, the author has argued elsewhere that the story sheds light on debt problems in economics, including the Latin American debt crisis of the early 1990s.
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Giddins, Gary. "Good Vibrations (Stefon Harris)." In Weather Bird, 235–37. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195304497.003.0062.

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Abstract Before this year, music lovers were known to remark on the odd statistic that all of the most eminent players of the vibraphone (and its acoustic forbears, the xylophone and marimba) were alive, defying the normal mortality rate while encompassing most of jazz’s history. True, vibraphonists constitute a small crowd—so small that jazz polls usually consign them to the same miscellany as French horn, bassoon, and didgeridoo. Like passengers on the Ark, they have arrived in pairs and at generational intervals: Lionel Hampton and Red Norvo (both born in 1908); Milt Jackson and Terry Gibbs (1923, 1924); Bobby Hutcherson and Gary Burton (1941, 1943); Jay Hoggard and Steve Nelson (both 1954). Their ranks have now ebbed by a fourth with the passing of Norvo in April and Jackson a few weeks ago, a loss partly relieved by the arrival of Stefon Harris (born 1973). No one starts out on vibes—musicians generally get there via the two instruments it fuses, piano and drums. Yet if for no other reason than that the vibes are quintessentially African, you might expect a lot more Harris’s new ballads, “After the Day Is Done” and “Faded Beauty,” are more fetching and less derivative than those on A Cloud of Red Dust. “Of Things to Come” is a solid 32-bar invention, with a modulated one-bar riff for its first half and an expansive melody for its second.
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"9. Neither Fish nor Fowl: A Non-mammalian Miscellany." In Why the Porcupine is Not a Bird, 207–26. University of Toronto Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781487510053-012.

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