Academic literature on the topic 'Debdebi'

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Journal articles on the topic "Debdebi"

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Hamidi, Abdelkader. "L’évolution d’un quartier périphérique en centre d’animation : Debdaba (Bechar)." Insaniyat / إنسانيات, no. 51-52 (June 30, 2011): 185–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/insaniyat.12647.

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Cole, Amanda. "Co-variation, style and social meaning: The implicational relationship between (h) and (ing) in Debden, Essex." Language Variation and Change 32, no. 3 (October 2020): 349–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954394520000162.

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AbstractThis paper demonstrates that the differing social meanings held by linguistic features can result in an implicational relationship between them. Rates of (h) and (ing) are investigated in the casual speech of sixty-three speakers from a community with Cockney heritage: Debden, Essex. The indexicalities of h-dropping in Debden (signalling Cockney) are superordinate to and incorporate the indexicalities of g-dropping (working-class, “improper”), resulting in an implicational relationship. H-dropping implies g-dropping, but g-dropping can occur independently of h-dropping. This occurs in terms of co-variation at the between-speaker level and clustering effects at the within-speaker level which is measured through a novel approach using the number of phonemes as the denomination of distance. The features’ differing social meaning are also related to rates of change. Young speakers are shifting away from linguistic features which index Cockney heritage (h-dropping; the [-Iŋk] variant of -thing words) in favor of more general, southeastern, working-class norms (g-dropping).
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Bendjelid, Abed. "Abdelkader HAMIDI : Mutation d’un quartier périphérique d’une ville moyenne en centre d’animation : Debdaba à Bechar (Algérie)." Insaniyat / إنسانيات, no. 32-33 (September 30, 2006): 261–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/insaniyat.3644.

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Djeffal, Dr Djafar, and Mr Aziz Laleg. "Decentralisation and City Diplomacy as an Alternative in the Development of Border Regions: Case Study-Debdab-Algeria." International Journal of Innovative Studies in Sociology and Humanities 8, no. 1 (2023): 371–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.20431/2456-4931.080139.

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LAWRENCE, JON. "INVENTING THE ‘TRADITIONAL WORKING CLASS’: A RE-ANALYSIS OF INTERVIEW NOTES FROM YOUNG AND WILLMOTT'S FAMILY AND KINSHIP IN EAST LONDON." Historical Journal 59, no. 2 (March 8, 2016): 567–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x15000515.

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ABSTRACTThis article examines surviving notes from interviews conducted by Michael Young and Peter Willmott in the London Borough of Bethnal Green and the Essex ‘overspill’ estate of ‘Greenleigh’ (Debden) in the mid-1950s to ask how far they support the central arguments about kinship, community, and place advanced in their classic 1957 book Family and kinship in East London. These interviews are used to suggest that Young and Willmott's powerful a priori models about ‘community’ and working-class kinship, and their strong political investment in the idea of a decentralized social democracy based on self-servicing, working-class communities, led them to discount testimony which ran counter to their assumptions as ‘aberrant’ or ‘exceptional’. Though it is difficult to draw strong conclusions from thirty-seven interviews, it is suggested that the snippets of personal testimony that survive in Michael Young's papers reinforce the arguments of historians who seek to question cataclysmic accounts of the consequences of working-class suburbanization in the mid-twentieth century. Culture and lifestyle changed much less with the move out to suburban Essex than Family and kinship would suggest, partly because Bethnal Green's family and neighbourhood networks were considerably less cohesive than they claimed.
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Lebeuf, Michel, Catherine M. Couillard, Benoît Légaré, and Steve Trottier. "Effects of DeBDE and PCB-126 on Hepatic Concentrations of PBDEs and Methoxy-PBDEs in Atlantic Tomcod." Environmental Science & Technology 40, no. 10 (May 2006): 3211–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es0521829.

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YUZAWA, Tetsuro, Akihiko HOSAKA, Chuichi WATANABE, and Shin TSUGE. "Evaluation of the Thermal Desorption-GC/MS Method for the Determination of Decabromodiphenyl Ether (DeBDE) in Order of a Few Hundred ppm Contained in a Certified Standard Polystyrene Sample." Analytical Sciences 24, no. 8 (2008): 953–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.2116/analsci.24.953.

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Dutta, Debduti, Rupam Das, Chayanika Das, Tulika Sarma, Sonali Das, Anuja Dutta, Tutumoni Baishya, Lekhika Pathak, and Bikul Das. "Abstract 807: An ethno-phenomenology based approach to study breast cancer disparity in rural India." Cancer Research 84, no. 6_Supplement (March 22, 2024): 807. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.am2024-807.

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Abstract There are fundamental lack of right methodologies to study the breast cancer disparity in rural India. Here, we have used an ethnographic-phenomenology approach to study the disparity in breast cancer care in Assam by using retrospective database of a rural cancer care non-profit clinic, the KaviKrishna Telemedicine Care (KTC), set up 1994 to develop a CBPR based cancer care (Abstract 3342, AACR 2019). Methodology: For one and half years, the doctors, researchers, nurses, caregivers, and physician assistants of KaviKrishna Laboratory and KaviKrishna Telemedicine Care were interviewed (total number: 15), and plus literature of the lab and the clinic were studied. Then, the breast cancer patients (n=10) and the families were subjected to ethnographies-phenomenology study to find their experiences of treatment and suffering. Next, thematic analysis and grounded theory were applied to come up with novel approaches to reduce breast cancer disparity. For comparison, 5 patients from rich urban families were interviewed. Results: We found that 10/10 patients found it extremely difficult to navigate the complexity of care in urban hospitals, but found the KTC approachable and comfortable. Importantly, these 10 breast cancer patients were positively responding to our KTC based care services/focussed group discussion (https://zenodo.org/records/8062404). They revealed positive experiences in emotionally and psychologically dealing with diagnostic, surgery, and chemotherapy processes. Next, our analysis of the last 25 years of the care data at KTC showed that in rural population, the loweconomic status, inadequate access to breast cancer detection clinics, lack of awareness,indecisive treatment protocols and social stigma are the main reasons for breast cancer disparity. Grounded theory-based analysis indicates that cancer biomarker study in rural populations can be a suitable method for early detection. Whole genome sequencing of cancer tissue frombiopsy samples shall provide landscape of mutation in the entire coding as well as noncodingregions. Mutation profiling along with correlation studies from patients can lead to discoveryof novel marker(s). Primary health care clinics in rural areas can be trained to collect patientsamples, isolate genomic DNA and perform PCR for the markers (a similar model asfollowed during Covid-19). The PCR samples can be sent to non-profit advanced diagnostic center such as KaviKrishna Lab to perform sequencing to study mutation markers. The method is also cost effective to both thecare givers and the patients as compared to setting up advanced diagnostic lab in every part ofrural area. Conclusion: The community based participatory research based model developed by KTC can be an effective strategy to reduce breast cancer disparity in the rural population since the primary health clinics shall act as a bridge between geologically isolated areas and modern technology. Citation Format: Debduti Dutta, Rupam Das, Chayanika Das, Tulika Sarma, Sonali Das, Anuja Dutta, Tutumoni Baishya, Lekhika Pathak, Bikul Das. An ethno-phenomenology based approach to study breast cancer disparity in rural India [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 807.
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Sandhya, Sorra, Rupam Das, Pragya Dutta, Avra Pratim Chowdhury, Pranjal Das, Sonali Das, Tutumoni Baishya, et al. "Abstract 1005: A three-decade-long community-based participatory research among India and Bhutan’s ethnic minorities led to the discovery of 32 unique medicinal plants having anti-cancer properties." Cancer Research 84, no. 6_Supplement (March 22, 2024): 1005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.am2024-1005.

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Abstract The country of Bhutan, and India’s Northeast is an economically deprived region inhabited by diverse groups of indigenous and underserved communities. They live in mostly rural areas, where cancer disparity is very high. On the other hand, they have rich traditional knowledge systems including tantra philosophies (remnant of the Vedic age philosophy), herbal medicinal practice, and spiritual practices that can be traced back to India’s Vedic age. To harness this traditional knowledge to reduce cancer disparity, we have taken an indigenous knowledge system (IKS) based approach (1) and initiated a community-based participatory research (CBPR) program in 1998 to conduct public health research in tuberculosis and cancer (2,3). Using this CBPR program, we have unraveled a Vedic age philosophy of Vedic Jiva Upkara Cikitsha Tantra (Vedic altruism-based medicinal system) (2,3). Specially, using the CBPR program we seek to identify novel herbal medicinal agents having anti-cancer activities. Methodologies: We used the CBPR methodologies of focused group discussion (FGD), debate, and community social work with various indigenous communities living in the Sualkuchi-Hajo cultural complex of Assam, Roing of Arunachal Pradesh, and Mongar of Bhutan. Since 1994, BD has conducted CBPR through the KaviKrishna Telemedicine Care. We have retrospectively analyzed the data of FGD, and suppositional reasoning (tarka) with the community healers, various Hindu, and Buddhist ethnic spiritual organizations of the region. Thematic analysis and the grounded theory method were applied to organize the data. The resulting database of herbal medicinal plants was searched in the scientific database to find the scientific names. Out of the 36 medicinal plants, we have prepared herbal extracts of 10 medicinal plants and then tested for their anti-cancer efficacy at the KaviKrishna Laboratory. Results: We have found the names of 32 plants used by the indigenous healers practicing the Vedic Jiva Upakara Cikitsha Tantra. We also found that these healers used curd-made whey protein concentrate, special soil, and fecal extracts to treat cancer (3). Our CBPR process also led to the research capacity building in the Sualkuchi-Hajo community. Conclusion: The study unraveled a unique cancer-care-related philosophy of Vedic Altruism. Our work indicates that IKS-based CBPR can equitably involve researchers and community members to develop a partnership for the process of knowledge emergence. We found that CBPR-based research takes new meaning because of the unique perspectives that inform the ways that research studies take shape for knowledge emergence. References: 1. Pathak L et al AACR abstract 3342, 2019. 2. Baishya T et al. https://zenodo.org/records/8062404. 3. Pathak et al AACR abstract 2772, 2023 Citation Format: Sorra Sandhya, Rupam Das, Pragya Dutta, Avra Pratim Chowdhury, Pranjal Das, Sonali Das, Tutumoni Baishya, Lekhika Pathak, Debduti Dutta, Nihar Ranjan Das, Pranab Sarma, Ista Pulu, Ujjal Mahanta, Dayal Krishha Bora, Hem Bhai, Bikul Das. A three-decade-long community-based participatory research among India and Bhutan’s ethnic minorities led to the discovery of 32 unique medicinal plants having anti-cancer properties [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 1005.
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COLE, AMANDA, and PATRYCJA STRYCHARCZUK. "Dialect levelling and Cockney diphthong shift reversal in South East England: the case of the Debden Estate." English Language and Linguistics, May 12, 2022, 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1360674321000290.

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This article explores an instance of dialect levelling in South East England, the reversal of Cockney diphthong shift. We trace this reversal through an apparent-time analysis of 52 speakers from Debden, a community in Essex with East London heritage. Dynamic vowel analyses of word-list and passage data suggests a reversal of the diphthong shift towards SSBE targets which has occurred most abruptly in those born after 1992 potentially as a result of increased social mobility in this generation. We compare the results in Debden to previous findings in the south-eastern towns of Milton Keynes and Reading where apparent-time change was also observed away from a shifted vowel system and towards SSBE targets (Kerswill & Williams 2000, 2005). In diverse areas of South East England, a common process of levelling towards the pan-regional standard is present which is not occurring exclusively as a result of dialect contact or face-to-face interaction. Nonetheless, each community exhibits a distinct trajectory and timing of language change which can be attributed to different patterns of movement and resettlement and, in particular, access to social mobility and the retention of community networks.
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Books on the topic "Debdebi"

1

Bucholtz, Chris. 4th Fighter Group - Debden Eagles. Oxford: Osprey, 2008.

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Speer, Frank E. The Debden Warbirds: The Fourth Fighter Group in World War II. Atglen, PA: [Schiffer Pub., 1999.

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Biggyan oo Debdebi: Spirituality and worship of deities in the light of Science and Yoga. Kolkata: Karuna Prakashani, 2001.

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Stone, John. Badge for Danny Barnes: The Debden Murders. Independently Published, 2022.

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Stone, John Lenard. Badge for Danny Barnes: Incorporating the Debden Murders. Independently Published, 2022.

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Barnett's Chigwell, Loughton, Buckhurst Hill, Debden: Street plan with index. Barking: Barnett, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Debdebi"

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"11 From John Dennison in Debden [Essex] to the overseers of Great Bardfield, 3 May 1836." In Records of Social and Economic History: New Series, Vol. 30: Essex Pauper Letters: 1731–1837, edited by Thomas Sokoll, 100. British Academy, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00166926.

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