Books on the topic 'Dog ownership'

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1

Davis, Kathy Diamond. Responsible dog ownership. New York: Howell Book House, 1994.

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2

Peterson, Cheryl. Please oh please can we get a dog?: Parents' guide to dog ownership. Hoboken, N.J: Howell Book House, 2005.

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3

Positive perspectives: The modern guide to successful dog ownership. Wenatchee, Wash: Dogwise Pub., 2004.

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4

1938-, Williams Wendy, ed. Dog days in France. Arundel: Eclipse Designs, 2005.

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5

The senior's guide to dog ownership: How to love, care for and keep your best friend. Leonia, NJ: Croce Pub., 2008.

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6

Richard, Trachtman, and Gershkoff Ira, eds. The Boston driver's handbook: The big dig edition. 2nd ed. Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley, 1993.

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7

Richard, Trachtman, ed. The Boston driver's handbook: The almost post big dig edition. 3rd ed. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press, 2004.

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8

Operations, United States Congress House Committee on Government. The proposed divestiture of the power marketing administration: DOE put the cart before the horse : fifty-fourth report. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1986.

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9

United States. Congress. House. Committee on Government Operations. The proposed divestiture of the power marketing administration: DOE put the cart before the horse : fifty-fourth report. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1986.

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10

United States. Congress. House. Committee on Government Operations. The proposed divestiture of the power marketing administration: DOE put the cart before the horse : fifty-fourth report. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1986.

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11

1943-, Vieitez Cândido Giraldez, ed. Educação democrática e trabalho associado no Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra e nas fábricas de autogestão. São Paulo, SP: Ícone Editora, 2008.

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12

Ri, Neusa Maria Dal. Educação democrática e trabalho associado no Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra e nas fábricas de autogestão. São Paulo, SP: Ícone Editora, 2008.

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13

De ferro e flexíveis: Marcas do Estado empresário e da privatização na subjetividade operária. Rio de Janeiro: Garamond, 2004.

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14

Holzmann, Lorena. Operários sem patrão: Gestão cooperativa e dilemas da democracia. São Carlos: Editora da UFSCar, 2001.

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15

Office, General Accounting. Budget issues: Potential for excess funds in DOD-March 1986 update : report to congressional requestors. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1986.

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16

Gagne, Tammy, and Liz Palika. Dog Ownership. Capstone, 2011.

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17

Adventures In Dog Ownership. Simon & Schuster Ltd, 2014.

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18

Pidcock-Reed, Heather. Dog Ownership & Training. Mason Crest, 2021.

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19

Victoria, Julian. Dog: Narratives of Dog Ownership. Hardie Grant Publishing, 2022.

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20

Roberts, Craig, and Theresa Barlow. Psychology of Dog Ownership. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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21

Psychology of Dog Ownership. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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22

Roberts, Craig, and Theresa Barlow. Psychology of Dog Ownership. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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23

Roberts, Craig, and Theresa Barlow. Psychology of Dog Ownership. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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24

Roberts, Craig, and Theresa Barlow. Psychology of Dog Ownership. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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25

Pidcock-Reed, Heather. Dog Ownership and Training. Mason Crest, 2021.

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26

Absolutely Barking Adventures In Dog Ownership. Simon & Schuster Ltd, 2013.

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27

Love Me, Love My Dog: Complete Dog Ownership Manual. TFH Publications, 1994.

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28

Hanson, Michele. Absolutely Barking: Adventures in Dog Ownership. Simon & Schuster, Limited, 2013.

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29

Peterson, Cheryl. Please, Oh Please Can We Get a Dog: Parents' Guide to Dog Ownership. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2005.

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30

Peterson, Cheryl. Please, Oh Please Can We Get A Dog: Parents' Guide to Dog Ownership. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2007.

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31

Turner, Lyvonne. So You Have a Dog Now What?: The 411 on Dog Ownership for Current and Future Dog Owners. Independently Published, 2020.

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32

Fielding, William J., and Jane Mather. Potcakes: Dog Ownership in New Providence, The Bahamas (New Discoveries in Human-Animal Links). Purdue University Press, 2005.

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33

Trayner, Poppy. Puppy Training for Kids, Dog Care, Dog Behavior, Dog Grooming, Dog Ownership, Dog Hand Signals, Easy, Fun Training*Fast Results, Mini Australian Shepherd Puppy Training, Puppy Training Book for Kids. Independently Published, 2020.

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34

Hafer, Dick. So You Want a Dog?: Questionable Answers to Your Questions About Doggie Ownership. Doral Publishing, 2003.

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35

Dogs All-in-One For Dummies: The most essential information on dog ownership in one easy-to-navigate book. Wiley Publishing, Inc, 2010.

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36

Day, Lauren. Wet Noses and Warm Hearts, a Look at Dog Ownership Through the Eyes of A 10-Year-Old. Lulu Press, Inc., 2011.

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37

Every Wolfs Howl A Memoir. Broadview Press Ltd, 2012.

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38

Vallentyne, Peter. Neurointerventions, Self-Ownership, and Enforcement Rights. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198758617.003.0007.

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Individuals who have not intruded, and who do not risk intruding, upon the rights of others, normally are wronged by harmful non-consensual neurointerventions. Nonetheless, this chapter argues that neurointerventions sometimes do not wrong the intervenee; namely, when (1) suitably valid consent has been given by the intervenee, or (2) the intervenee risks non-rightfully intruding upon the rights of others and the intervention is proportionate and necessary for suitably reducing the intrusion-harms she imposes, or (3) the intervenee is not psychologically autonomous and the intervention is in her interests. Moreover, in the second case, it wrongs an individual to impose harmful non-consensual alternatives to neurointerventions (such as incarceration) when they impose greater intrusion-harm on the individual and do not achieve a greater reduction in the relevant intrusion-harm she imposes.
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39

Sobel, David. The Point of Self-Ownership. Edited by David Schmidtz and Carmen E. Pavel. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199989423.013.6.

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Traditional Libertarian Self-Ownership views suffer from the Conflation Problem—they fail to adequately distinguish serious from trivial infringements on our rights. Eric Mack has responded to this general concern. He argues that if we properly understand the point of rights, we can successfully distinguish between boundaries that it is morally crucial that we not cross from boundaries that are more flexible. This chapter argues that Mack’s proposed understanding of the point of rights—allowing people to live their own lives in their own way, uninterfered with—is ambiguous. Either we understand Mack’s notion of the point of rights in a moralized way or we do not. Either way, Mack’s view is inadequate, and thus he has not solved the general problem of distinguishing serious and trivial infringements on rights.
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40

Cruft, Rowan. Human Rights, Ownership, and the Individual. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198793366.001.0001.

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What do we mean by rights, and can our use of the concept be justified? This book offers a partial vindication of the concept of a right, defending its use in relation to human rights while questioning it in relation to property. It starts with a new ‘Addressive’ account of the nature of rights as bringing together duty-bearer and right-holder first-personally—a theory which moves beyond and complements traditional Interest and Will Theories. This Addressive account implies that a right exists pre-institutionally (as a ‘natural’ or ‘moral’ right) only when a duty owes its existence predominantly to the right-holder’s good. On this basis, the book defends human rights law and practice as justifiably institutionalizing certain pre-legal moral rights held against other individuals and the state, including socio-economic rights. This defence proceeds independently of whichever conception of ‘the important human features’ (e.g. agency, capabilities, freedoms, interests, needs) one takes to underpin human rights—though it does depend on a distinction between individual and other goods. The book ends by arguing that for much property, conceiving the relevant duties in rights terms can mislead us into overlooking their foundation in the collective good. An alternative non-rights property system—broadly resembling modern markets but not conceived in terms of rights—is outlined. The result is a defence of the rights concept that is more supportive of human rights than many of their critics (from left or right) might expect, while pressing new doubts about much property as an individual right.
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41

Trachtman, Richard, and Ira Gershkoff. Boston Driver's Handbook: The Almost Post Big Dig Edition. Hachette Books, 2009.

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42

Blasi, Joseph R., Richard B. Freeman, and Douglas L. Kruse. Evidence. Edited by Jonathan Michie, Joseph R. Blasi, and Carlo Borzaga. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199684977.013.15.

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Sharing the fruits of labour with workers has led to initiatives of both profit-sharing and worker ownership. Several decades of research shows that firms with worker ownership and profit-sharing tend to do better on average. A variety of studies, those comparing firms before and after they initiated worker ownership, those comparing workers in the same firm with and without worker ownership, and those looking at combinations of worker ownership and profit-sharing, find the same results. Evidence from large groups of firms and large samples of workers show that a supportive corporate culture is generally necessary for worker ownership to function best. Cash profit-sharing in the short term tends to strengthen the economic performance edge.
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43

de Vignemont, Frédérique. Whose Body? Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198735885.003.0002.

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Does it feel different when I am aware that these arms are my own and when I am not? Advocates of the liberal view reply positively and claim that we have a primitive nonconceptual awareness of bodily ownership, whereas advocates of the conservative view reject a distinctive experiential signature for the sense of bodily ownership: ownership is something that we believe in, and not something that we experience. How to adjudicate the debate? This chapter appeals to the method of phenomenal contrast to argue that feelings of ownership are not philosophical fictions, contrary to what some have claimed. To do so, the chapter analyses in detail the rubber hand illusion and syndromes of disownership and rejects a cognitive interpretation of these cases.
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44

Alexander, Gregory S. Property and Human Flourishing. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190860745.001.0001.

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Many people assume that what morally justifies private ownership of property is either individual freedom or social welfare, defined in terms of maximizing personal preference-satisfaction. This book offers an alternative way of understanding the moral underpinning of private ownership of property. Rather than identifying any single moral value, this book argues that human flourishing is property’s moral foundation. It develops a theory that connects ownership and human flourishing with obligations. Owners owe obligations to members of the communities that have enabled the owners to live flourishing lives by cultivating in their community members certain capabilities that are essential to leading a well-lived life. These obligations are rooted in the interdependence that exists between owners and their community members, a condition that is inherent in the human condition. Obligations have always been inherent in ownership. The human flourishing theory explains why owners at times owe obligations that enable their fellow community members to develop certain necessary capabilities. This book considers implications for a wide variety of property issues of importance both in the literature and in modern society. These include questions such as: When is a government’s expropriation of property legitimate? May the owner of a historic house destroy it without restriction? Do institutions that owned African slaves or otherwise profited from the slave trade owe any obligations to the African American community? What insights may be gained from the human flourishing concept into resolving current housing problems like homelessness, eviction, and mortgage foreclosure?
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45

Guthrie, Graeme. Overseeing the unseeable. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190641184.003.0003.

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A wide separation of ownership and control causes managers’ interests to diverge from those of shareholders. The asymmetry of information between a firm’s board and its managers gives managers the means to behave in ways that benefit themselves if they choose to do so. This chapter uses two episodes in the history of Yahoo to explain the potential for conflict between managers and shareholders, starting with attempts to raise capital when Yahoo was in its infancy and the fact that the managers owned the entire firm meant there was no conflict. The second episode involves Microsoft’s attempt to acquire Yahoo in 2008, when the founders’ much smaller ownership stake led to accusations that the firm’s management was not working in shareholders’ best interests.
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46

Kantor, Georgy, Tom Lambert, and Hannah Skoda, eds. Legalism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198813415.001.0001.

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In this volume, ownership is defined as the simple fact of being able to describe something as ‘mine’ or ‘yours’, and property is distinguished as the discursive field which allows the articulation of attendant rights, relationships and obligations. Property is often articulated through legalism as way of thinking which appeals to rules and to generalising concepts as a way of understanding, responding to, and managing the world around one. An Aristotelian perspective suggests that ownership is the natural state of things and a prerequisite of a true sense of self. An alternative perspective from legal theory puts law at the heart of the origins of property. However, both these points of view are problematic in a wider context, the latter because it rests heavily on Roman law. Anthropological and historical studies enable us to interrogate these assumptions. The articles here, ranging from Roman provinces to modern-day piracy in Somalia, address questions such as: How are legal property regimes intertwined with economic, moral-ethical, and political prerogatives? How far do the assumptions of western philosophical tradition explain property and ownership in other societies? Is the ‘bundle of rights’ a useful way to think about property? How does legalism negotiate property relationships and interests between communities and individuals? How does the legalism of property respond to the temporalities and materialities of the objects owned? How are property regimes managed by states, and what kinds of conflicts are thus generated?
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47

Associação dos Funcionários do Conglomerado Banespa e Cabesp., ed. Bancada paulista x BANESPA: Pesquisa com senadores e deputados federais paulistas sobre a privatização do BANESPA. São Paulo, SP: Associação dos Funcionários do Conglomerado Banespa e Cabesp, 1996.

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48

Higham, Charles F. W. Farming, social change, and state formation in Southeast Asia. Edited by Umberto Albarella, Mauro Rizzetto, Hannah Russ, Kim Vickers, and Sarah Viner-Daniels. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199686476.013.23.

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Farming in Southeast Asia is dominated two major crops, rice and millet, and domestic pigs, cattle, water buffalo, chickens, and dogs. The domestication of these species took place in China, and the first farmers began to settle Southeast Asia in the early second millennium bc. They integrated with the indigenous hunter-gatherers, and were heavily reliant not only on their crops and domestic animals, but also on hunting, gathering, and fishing. An agricultural revolution took place during the Iron Age, involving plough agriculture in permanent fields. Ownership of improved land would have stimulated the rise of social elites and dependent craft specialists, factors underlying the rapid formation of early states.
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49

Marcus, Smith, and Leslie Nico. Part I The Nature of Intangible Property, 7 Intellectual Property. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198748434.003.0007.

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This chapter examines intellectual property. The governing principles relating to intellectual property are very different from the principles that underlie other choses, like rights under contracts or debts. Like shares, intellectual property rights are characterized by specific statutory rules relating to their creation, as well as to their transfer. Intellectual property rights can be divided under six heads: patents; copyright; moral rights; industrial design rights; trademarks; and confidential information. In each case, the holder of the right is able—by virtue of ownership—to prevent others from doing what they otherwise could do. Each of these intellectual property rights has four different aspects: the intellectual property right itself; rights of action for infringement; validity challenges; and licensing.
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50

French, Derek. 13. Corporate governance. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198815105.003.0013.

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This chapter surveys corporate governance. It identifies the key problem of the separation of ownership and control in companies that are not owner-managed. Shareholders are seen as the owners of the company but directors manage the company and can do so for their own benefit rather than the shareholders’. There is a list of the numerous legal controls on directors, which are studied in other chapters. There is discussion of two ways of looking at directors, either as stewards who must account for their actions to the owners or as entrepreneurs whose wealth-creating work deserves reward. The UK Corporate Governance Code, which applies to premium listed companies, is discussed, as is shareholder activism.
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