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1

Jraissati, Yasmina. "Editorial: Sensory Categories." Review of Philosophy and Psychology 10, no. 3 (August 2, 2019): 419–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13164-019-00439-8.

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2

Job, Ivone, and Silvana Vilodre Goellner. "Proposta de instrumento para avaliação da gestão editorial das revistas científicas brasileiras em educação física e ciências do esporte." RDBCI: Revista Digital de Biblioteconomia e Ciência da Informação 13, no. 1 (January 30, 2015): 207. http://dx.doi.org/10.20396/rdbci.v13i1.1589.

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Este trabalho contempla a proposta e aplicação de um instrumento para avaliar a gestão editorial das revistas com base em determinados conceitos, categorias e unidades de análise. O instrumento foi aplicado em revistas da área de educação física e ciências do esporte, mas poderá ser utilizado em revistas das demais áreas. A pesquisa é de cunho quantitativo, bibliométrico e identifica critérios mais importantes para avaliar a gestão editorial das revistas que foram agrupados em cinco categorias: qualidade editorial, difusão, normalização, processo de arbitragem e autoria. Para cada categoria há determinados indicadores, especificados segundo sua definição, aplicação e pontuação. Das 12 revistas analisadas 8 atingiram 80% dos critérios exigidos. Nos resultados são apresentados os pontos fortes do conjunto de revistas, suas características e recomendações aos editores e comitês editoriais. Se as categorias normalização e qualidade editorial estão bem pontuadas no conjunto, o mesmo não se pode dizer das de difusão, processo de arbitragem e autoria.AbstractThis work describes the proposal and application of an instrument to evaluate the editorial management of the journals based on given concepts, categories and units of analysis. The instrument was applied in journals in the area of physical education and sport sciences, but can be used in journals from other areas. The research started from the premise that it was necessary to check what the most important criteria for evaluating the management of periodicals. These were grouped into five categories: editorial quality, dissemination, standardization, arbitration procedure and authorship. For each category there are certain indicators, specified according to its definition, implementation and scoring. It was applied in 12 journals in the area and eight reached 80% of the required criteria, and on the results are presented the strengths of all the journals, their characteristics and recommendations for editors and editorial boards. If the standardization and editorial quality categories are well scored on the whole, the same cannot be said of dissemination, arbitration procedure and authorship.KeywordsManegement.. Periodicals. Editing.
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3

Endres, Fredric F. "Editorial Writers and the Research Process." Newspaper Research Journal 8, no. 3 (March 1987): 11–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953298700800302.

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A national survey of editorial writers shows that, across three circulation categories, there are differences in the research process, availability and use of resources and how writers rate usefulness of sources. Research problems for all groups centered on the in-house library and lack of sufficient time to research and write. Most editorial writers make wide use of news makers, local leaders and attendance at meetings for ideas and background material. Some writers disagree about how much research is needed to make editorials effective.
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Dizon, Brigette Olalia. "The Typology and Semantic Functions of Reporting Verbs in Online editorials of Philippine newspapers." Indonesian Journal of English Language Studies (IJELS) 7, no. 2 (October 14, 2021): 58–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.24071/ijels.v7i2.3637.

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The purpose of this study is to examine and determine the typology and the semantic functions of the reporting verbs used in the editorial sections of five Philippine online newspapers. Quantitative analysis was assumed in procuring the frequency counts and percentages of the data to be analyzed while qualitative analysis was applied in analyzing and categorizing the typology and semantic characteristics of the reporting verbs. The corpus of the study involved online editorial sections of five Philippine newspapers. Reporting verbs were highlighted or marked each time they appeared in every reporting sentence from the online editorials. Manual tallying was employed in obtaining the frequencies. Afterwards, the reporting verbs underwent examination and categorization for its typology and semantic characteristics. Findings show that the reporting verbs discovered from the online editorial sections were divided into five semantic categories. These categories were as follows: communication verbs, mental verbs, activity verbs, causative verbs, and verbs of aspect. Also, most of the reporting verbs found were from the communication category. As regards the typology, results show that all online editorial sections from the five Philippine online newspapers employed and examined used a significant deal of reporting verbs which were considered as public in reporting information.
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Nawaz, Muhammad Ahmad, and Sajjad Ali. "Comparative Study of Editorials of Daily Dawn and Daily the News International Regarding Electricity Crisis of Pakistan." Global Mass Communication Review I, no. I (December 30, 2016): 28–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gmcr.2016(i-i).03.

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This research investigates the editorial coverage of two elite newspapers of Pakistan; Daily the News International and Daily Dawn regarding electricity crisis in Pakistan from June 2010 to May 2011. For this research study, 49 editorials were studied, comprised 648 sentences. Twenty-two editorials (291 sentences) in Daily Dawn and 27 editorials (357 sentences) published in Daily the News International during the proposed period of the study. All editorial sentences are divided into five different categories; Causes, Effects, Reactions, Solutions and Miscellaneous of the electricity crisis according to the nature of data. The study finds out that both newspapers gave 22.06% favourable, 36.57% unfavourable coverage, while 41.35% neutral coverage on the issue which shows that both the newspapers have given more neutral coverage. The researcher used framing theory as a theoretical framework. In light of results, the researcher concluded that the media framed this crisis in a neutral way.
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Yasin, Zaeem, Farah Saleem Qureshi, and Menahil Farrukh. "FRAMING OF PAKISTANI MEDIA REGARDING AFGHAN TALIBAN: BEFORE AND AFTER THEIR TAKEOVER." Pakistan Journal of Social Research 04, no. 03 (September 30, 2022): 291–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.52567/pjsr.v4i03.714.

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The purpose of the study is to investigate the framing of Pakistani Media in the context of the Afghan Taliban before and after their takeover of Afghanistan. The main objective is to implore the shift in media’s reporting regarding the said group. To do so, the researcher opted for the qualitative research method and pursued content analysis. Editorials regarding the Afghan Taliban from three English language Newspapers are selected through a purposive sampling method from January 1st, 2021, to December 31st, 2021, for this study. Each editorial is read carefully and broken down into parts to determine the title, the kind of language used, the kind of tone conveyed, and the placement of the certain editorial. After categorizing these characteristics, the editorial is further placed into Negative, Positive, and Neutral categories. These categories are the defining source of the whole investigation. Further statistical testing i.e., Chi-Square Testing is applied to compare the framing before and after the takeover which is before August and after the August of 2021. The testing determined the shift suspected by the researcher and confirmed the hypothesis. The results categorically showed that Pakistani print media shifted from negative to positive reporting of the Afghan Taliban hence proving the researcher’s stance. Keywords: Framing, Pakistani media, Afghan Taliban, takeover
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7

Khater, Akram, and Jeffrey Culang. "EDITORIAL FOREWORD." International Journal of Middle East Studies 48, no. 3 (July 6, 2016): 441–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743816000428.

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This issue examines the power of categories, both historically and in contemporary scholarly and public discourse. Whether focused on medicine in colonial Algeria, the varied meanings of the word “mamluk” in Ottoman Tunisia, discursive constructions of the “Jewish refugee,” gender as an analytical category in academic writing, or another topic, our article and roundtable authors push us to consider how categories have shaped modes of life and politics, and how they shape our scholarship.
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8

King, Michael. "Reducing the stigma of public health messages. Invited commentary on … Everybody gets stressed." Psychiatric Bulletin 33, no. 12 (December 2009): 443–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.bp.109.027557.

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SummaryHuman beings have evolved the capacity to classify everything they perceive and our urge to categorise psychological phenomena is little different. Categories make life easier to manage. However, nature rarely comes wrapped in discrete packages, and as David Kingdon persuasively argues in his editorial, we might do well to avoid the catch-all term ‘mental disorder’ in our public health messages.
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9

Pillai, K. Sadasivan. "Classifying chemicals into toxicity categories based on LC50 values- Pros and cons." Journal of Environmental Biology 44, no. 5 (September 2, 2023): i—iii. http://dx.doi.org/10.22438/jeb/44/5/editorial.

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It is a usual practice to determine LC50 value in acute toxicity studies conducted in aquatic organisms as an initial step to assess the toxicity of chemicals. In regulatory toxicity studies, normally conducted in GLP (Good Laboratory Practice) certified facilities, acute toxicity of chemicals is evaluated in fish, crustacea, and or alga following the methods given in OECD Guidelines. The chemicals are classified into different toxicity categories based on the LC50/EC50 determined from the acute toxicity studies. For calculating LC50 in acute toxicity tests, the methods given in the OECD (2019) Guidelines are Probit or Logit Analysis (Litchfield & Wilcoxon method and Probit Analysis), Spearman-Karber method, the binomial method, the moving average method, and the graphical method. LC50 is the concentration of a substance that causes 50 % mortality in a batch of test organisms (eg. fish). In acute toxicity studies with laboratory animals like rats, mice, rabbits, etc, instead of LC50, the terminology LD50 is used. The procedure for the calculation of both LC50 and LD50 is same. In this article, LC50 and LD50 are written interchangeably. It means if 100 fish are exposed to LC50, theoretically 50 fish would die. In fact, the inventor of LC50 (Trevan, 1927) defined LC50 as the median lethal concentration. Like any other median value, the LC50 is not affected by extreme values of either side. Unfortunately, Trevan was ruthlessly misquoted by the animal ethicists, as they believed that he was responsible for killing millions of animals for determining the median lethal concentration. According to Rowan (1983), the median lethal concentration in animals varies considerably among the species and is affected by environmental factors. Trevan proposed median lethal concentration (LD50) in frogs and rodents for biological standardization of digitalis extract, insulin, and diphtheria toxin when he was working at Wellcome Research Labs, Beckenham (Pillai et al., 2021a). Trevan never promoted sacrificing more animals to determine median lethal concentration. He was aware of the fact that the determination of median lethal concentration is affected by several factors. The 'characteristic' of a dose-response curve proposed by Trevan is species and test substance-specific. However, after Trevan, LD50s were determined in acute toxicity studies to evaluate the effect of a substance, not for the biological standardization of drugs. His intention was to establish a numerical quality control standard to assess batch-to-batch variation, if any, of the therapeutic products of the Wellcome Research Labs. Based on the LC50/EC50 values determined in aquatic toxicity studies, the chemicals are classified into a hazard category. For example, according to United Nations Global Harmonized System (GHS), if the 96 LC50 of a chemical to fish is ≤ 1 mg l-1 , this chemical is classified into hazard category I (GHS, 2019).Though several methods are prescribed in OECD (2019) Guidelines, if the mortality data are adequate, Probit Analysis of Finney (1978) and Litchfield and Wilcoxon (1949) method may be preferred to determine LC50 as these methods provide additional valuable information on the concentration-mortality relationship. If the lowest mortality obtained is close to 16% and the highest mortality is close to 84%, most of the above-mentioned methods would result in a more or less similar LC50value (Pillai et al., 2021a).Calculation of LC50 manually by the Litchfield and Wilcoxon method is somewhat easier, but Probit Analysis is a bit cumbersome. Commercial statistical software is available for the calculation of LC50 by both the above methods. But, using the software without understanding the underlying concepts of the statistical methods has certain disadvantages. Researchers also present the toxicity of a substance in terms of LC10, LC90, etc. Since the variability of these estimates is large, their biological relevance is limited. Concentration-mortality curve in the 16-84% mortality range is linear, hence the LC50 determined from this concentration-mortality curve is reliable. The method of Litchfield and Wilcoxon (1949), uses the 16-84% mortality range for calculating LC50. This method does not consider mortality below 16 and above 84% for the LC50 calculation. But Probit Analysis by Finney (1978) considers all mortality values (excluding 0 and 100 % mortality) for the calculation of LC50. Researchers in academic institutions use LC50 values to compare the toxicity of the test substances - the lower the LC50, the substance is more toxic, and vice-versa (Islam et al., 2021).Toxicity grading of substances solely based on LC50 is inappropriate. Recently, the appropriate use of LC50 values for the GHS classification of chemicals has been questioned (Pillai et al., 2021a). LC50s vary in a wide range from one species to the other (Geyer et al., 1993) and many times are irreproducible within the same species (Peres and Pihan, 1991), as the physico-chemical parameters of dilution water play a crucial role in LC50 experiments. Hrovat et al. (2009) reported significant variability of fish LC50 test results for 44 compounds. A consistent LC50 could not be obtained in more than 750 tests conducted on fathead minnows with 644 chemicals (Mc Carty, 2012). It is a statutory requirement for the United Nations GHS that the environmental hazards should be mentioned on the labels of chemicals for distribution. The European Chemicals Agency (ECHA, 2017) uses fish LC50 for the environmental classification of a chemical according to the GHS of Classification, Labelling and Packaging of Chemicals (Paparella et al., 2021). The major disadvantage of such labelling is that the LC50 value alone does not provide information on the toxicity profile of chemicals. Showing a similar LC50 does not mean that the toxicity profile of the chemicals is same. It is important to consider the slopes of the concentration-mortality curve when comparing the LC50s of the chemicals. The slope which reflects the concentration-mortality relationship provides a better understanding of the causality between a toxicant and response (Tsatsakis et al., 2018). In Probit Analysis, parallel regression lines of mortality probits on log concentrations indicate that the mode of action of chemicals on test organisms is similar (Finney, 1978). If the regression lines are not parallel, it is a clear indication that the chemicals possess different modes of action on that particular organism. Also, it is important to present LC50 with 95% confidence limits. If the 95% confidence limits of LC50s of the chemicals are distinctly separate, LC50s can be considered different from each other. The LC50s cannot be considered different from each other if the 95% confidence limits of the LC50s overlap. Chemicals with similar LC50 values may manifest toxicity differently. Similarly, chemicals with different LC50 values may manifest similar toxicity effects; hence, the classification of chemicals into various groups based on LC50 values may not have much relevance (Pillai et al., 2021b). Ethical conduct of fish toxicity studies and euthanizing of exposed fish are emphasized in the OECD (2019) and CCSEA (Committee for Control and Supervision of Experiments on Animals) Guidelines (CPCSEA, 2021). Earlier the fish toxicity studies were conducted with 10 fish exposed to each test concentration, but the revised OECD (2019) Guideline recommends a minimum number of 7 fish for each test concentration. The probable mortality data that can be obtained in an acute test where 7 numbers of fish are exposed to each test concentration are (number of fish died/total number of fish exposed) 0/7, 1/7, 2/7, 3/7, 4/7, 5/7, 6/7, or 7/7. For calculating LC50 values by the methods of Litchfield and Wilcoxon (1949) and Finney (1978), 0 and 100% mortality are not used, since no probit values can be assigned for 0 and 100% mortality. The remaining 6 numbers of mortality data are adequate for calculating a reliable LC50 value, if the mortality data spreads over all phases of the concentration-mortality curve, particularly covering 16-84% mortality region. If the mortality data does not spread over all the phases of the concentration-mortality curve in a concentration-dependent manner, the confidence limits of LC50 could be exploded (Pillai et al., 2021b). Estimation of LD50 in rodents by the methods of Litchfield and Wilcoxon (1949) and Finney (1978) is discouraged by US Consumer Product Safety Commission, US Environmental Protection Agency, US Food and Drug Administration, National Toxicology Program, and OECD, due to ethical reasons and poor reproducibility of LD50 values. But, classical methods are used to determine LC50 values in environmental toxicity studies, especially with aquatic organisms. It is more biologically relevant to interpret LC50 in terms of the slope of concentration-mortality curve and confidence interval of LC50. My association with Dr. R.C. Dalela and Journal of Environmental Biology began in the early 1980s when he was working at D.A.V College Muzaffarnagar. His research work and enthusiasm for bringing up the Journal of Environmental Biology to an international standard fascinated me. I realized from his research work that he was a committed environmentalist. I had an opportunity to majorly organize two national conferences of the Academy of Environmental Biology. He always occupied the front row in the conferences listening to all scientific presentations keenly. He had taken a lot of hardships to bring the journal to this sustainable level with a WOS Impact Factor of 0.70. I remember as it had happened yesterday, my meeting with him at D.A.V. College, Muzaffarnagar, at JRF, Vapi, Marathwada Ambedkar University, Aurangabad, and in Chennai. He was an excellent teacher, a great scientist, a mentor to several researchers, and self-disciplined.
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10

Stefan, Riley. "Cancer Immunotherapy and its Benefit: An Editorial." Cancer Medicine Journal 1, no. 1 (August 31, 2018): 37–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.46619/cmj.2018.1-1005.

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Cancer immunotherapy is also known as immuno-oncology which is the artificial activation of the immune system to fight against cancer, improving on the immune system's natural ability to fight the germs and disease causing cancer. Immunotherapy can be classified as into three categories such as active, passive and hybrid.
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11

Franzato, Carlo, and Edu Jacques. "Editorial." Strategic Design Research Journal 15, no. 3 (October 16, 2023): 232–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.4013/sdrj.2022.153.01.

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We present the final issue of this editorial year, featuring a diverse range of contributions. In this volume, we carefully selected nine papers, aiming to create a thematic continuum. Interestingly, this selection resulted in an opening and concluding submission both centered around the subject of "meaning." The papers in this issue can be grouped into three categories.
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Nawaz, Muhammad ahmad, and Sumaira Malik. "Portrayal of women issues by Pakistani and Indian English elite newspapers." Media and Communication Review 1, no. 1 (June 16, 2021): 30–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.32350/mcr.11.03.

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This research investigates the portrayal of women issues by Daily The News International and Daily Times of India during January 2019 to December 2020. It is basically a comparative study of portrayal of women by Pakistani and Indian English elite newspapers. It is a census study conducted by caring out content analysis of 17 editorials of Daily The News International and 25 editorials of Daily Times of India. All editorial sentences are divided into 19 categories according to the nature of data. The researcher used two communication theories (framing and feminism) and concluded that media frame women issues factual based in news and negative in editorials. The study finds out that both newspapers given 21.05% positive, 56.62% negative & 22.32% neutral editorial coverage, so overall coverage remained positive. The researcher finds out that both newspapers (Daily The News International & Daily Times of India) highlight variety of women issues like; murder, honor killing, suicide, kidnapping, torture, sexual harassment, rape, molestation, domestic violence, battering, marriage issues, acid attack, misbehave, fire burning, hurts, lack of political participation, domestic abuse and eloping. The researcher also has given some suggestions for the solution of these kinds of issue. Key Words: Women portrayal, elite press, Indian press, women issue
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Nawaz, Muhammad ahmad, and Sumaira Malik. "Portrayal of women issues by Pakistani and Indian English elite newspapers." Media and Communication Review 1, no. 1 (June 16, 2021): 30–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.32350/mcr.11.03.

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This research investigates the portrayal of women issues by Daily The News International and Daily Times of India during January 2019 to December 2020. It is basically a comparative study of portrayal of women by Pakistani and Indian English elite newspapers. It is a census study conducted by caring out content analysis of 17 editorials of Daily The News International and 25 editorials of Daily Times of India. All editorial sentences are divided into 19 categories according to the nature of data. The researcher used two communication theories (framing and feminism) and concluded that media frame women issues factual based in news and negative in editorials. The study finds out that both newspapers given 21.05% positive, 56.62% negative & 22.32% neutral editorial coverage, so overall coverage remained positive. The researcher finds out that both newspapers (Daily The News International & Daily Times of India) highlight variety of women issues like; murder, honor killing, suicide, kidnapping, torture, sexual harassment, rape, molestation, domestic violence, battering, marriage issues, acid attack, misbehave, fire burning, hurts, lack of political participation, domestic abuse and eloping. The researcher also has given some suggestions for the solution of these kinds of issue. Key Words: Women portrayal, elite press, Indian press, women issue
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Adjei, Amma Abrafi. "Style in the Print Media: Perspectives from the Editorials of a Ghanaian Newspaper." Namibian Journal for Research, Science and Technology 2, no. 1 (December 11, 2020): 63–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.54421/njrst.v2i1.20.

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The study employs linguistic stylistic analysis, specifically, Leech and Shorts’ (2007) stylistic categories to identify the stylistic features used predominantly in selected newspaper editorials. The corpus used is made up of thirty editorials which are randomly selected. It employs the qualitative research design to analyse selected texts. The analysis reveals that the editorial of the Daily Graphicabounds in the use of stylistic features through the use of lexical items. Among others, the study discusses that the editorial makes use of major lexical items such as nouns, adjectives, adverbs and verbs, with nouns dominating the lexical choices and adjectives, the least. It adds that the use of different linguistic and stylistic features in the packaging ofinformation is motivated and purposeful, because the features help in the interpretation and meaning of the editorial. The analysis of lexical items has helped to provide an interpretation to the editorials in addition to showing the communicative relationship between author and reader. Pedagogically, the study is significant in the sense that it provides an avenue for students and teachers of language to observe how the appropriate selection of lexical items helps in text construction and meaning creation. The study recommends that stylistic features are helpful in the packaging and interpretation of texts (editorials included), therefore, language users: writers, teachers, students and other users of language, especially in ESL and EFL contexts, should beguided in authentic use of linguistic items in the packaging of information in the language classroom and in other contexts.This study makes a modest contribution to understanding the relationship between collective action and collective identity in CBNRM and similar institutions.
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Hameed, Shafqat, Ashraf Iqbal, and Kashaf Abdul Razaq. "A Study of Trump’s Narrative about Islam in US Press." Global Digital & Print Media Review IV, no. III (September 30, 2021): 33–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gdpmr.2021(iv-iii).04.

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The study's goal is to investigate the coverage of Donald Trump's anti-Islam narrative in the United States press. The events of September 11, 2001, in New York City, and in San Bernardino,California, among others, impacted the socio-cultural, socio-economic, socio-political, and foreign policies of many countries throughout the world. The current research is essentially a content analysis of two editorials from two different newspapers in the United States (The NewYork Times and The Washington Post). The editorial contents were divided into four categories: A (US government relations with Muslim countries), B (coverage of Islam/Muslims in the war on terrorism), C(Donald Trump's stance on US-Muslim Countries bilateral relations),and D (US government's stance on US-Muslim Countries bilateral relations). To assess the association between different variables, the Chi-square statistical test was performed. The findings show that following the 2016 presidential elections in the United States, editorial overage of Trump's anti-Islam narrative was less favorable than previously.
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Nair, Sreenath. "Editorial." Indian Theatre Journal 6, no. 1 (August 1, 2022): 2–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/itj_00022_2.

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‘Reality television’ is the product of twentieth-century technology culture that incorporates a wide range of media activities including talent shows, documentary series and celebrity shows. One of the frequently discussed issues in the current scholarship is the representation of multiculturalism in western ‘reality shows’, particularly of South Asian families and their lives. The current issue remains as a genuine attempt to capture, analyse and theorize a number of highly important categories of ‘reality television’ in South Asian scholarship.
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Pine, Daniel S. "Editorial: Categories and dimensions: reflections on obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)." Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 52, no. 12 (October 10, 2011): 1221–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7610.2011.02485.x.

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Welch, Penny, and Susan Wright. "Editorial." Learning and Teaching 8, no. 2 (June 1, 2015): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/latiss.2015.080201.

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Welcome to this issue of Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences. Important social aspects of contemporary higher education are addressed in this issue by authors from a number of countries and social science disciplines. These range from learning and teaching concepts of capitalism and alienation, to the impacts of computerised university administration, the systematic ways certain categories of students fall through cracks in the academic pipeline, and how to reintroduce social activism into a ‘professionalised’ curriculum and teach social justice through international study visits.
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Johansen, Guro Gravem, Anna Houmann, and Danielle Treacy. "Editorial." Nordic Research in Music Education 2, no. 2 (December 17, 2021): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.23865/nrme.v2.3663.

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The current issue of Nordic Research in Music Education presents six research articles that in various ways call into question beliefs and established truths within music education, such as perceptions of teacher qualifications for music activities in preschool and primary school, and and who institutions select and educate to become music teachers. Furthermore, the articles address how notions of diversity, intercultural music education and genre categorizations influence the construction of content in music education, and what happens when these categories travel between music cultures and their reconstruction as content in the classroom.
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Jankun, Jerzy, Roberta Redfern, and Arjun Sabharwal. "Editorial: what editors welcome." Translation: The University of Toledo Journal of Medical Sciences 5 (June 27, 2018): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.46570/utjms.vol5-2018-200.

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Translation; The University of Toledo Journal of Medical Sci- ences, online journal, launched a few years ago by UT, is accepting again papers in all aspects of medical sciences in four different categories.
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MITKOV, RUSLAN. "Editorial note." Natural Language Engineering 24, no. 1 (December 8, 2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1351324917000456.

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The Journal of Natural Language Engineering (JNLE) has enjoyed another very successful year. The impact factor of the journal has increased for the third consecutive year, with the journal being listed among both Linguistics and Computer Science categories. Against the background of a record number of submissions, JNLE has, since 2016, been offering six 160-page issues per year, which by far exceeds the four 96-page issues offered less than 10 years ago!
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Oliveira, Luiz Henrique Silva de. "Quilombismo editorial e ethos discursivo: uma análise do site da Mazza edições / “Editorial Quilombism” and Discursive Ethos: an Analysis of the Mazza Editions Website." Caligrama: Revista de Estudos Românicos 27, no. 1 (August 12, 2022): 228. http://dx.doi.org/10.17851/2238-3824.27.1.228-245.

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A proposta deste artigo é analisar o discurso de apresentação contidos no site da Mazza Edições (https://www.mazzaedicoes.com.br). Para tanto, tomaremos duas categorias essenciais: o quilombismo e o ethos discursivo. Os quilombos, segundo Abdias do Nascimento não e resumiram apenas a arregimentações sociais, constituídas por pessoas escravizadas, em territórios de exploração colonial. A solidariedade e a resistência são características marcantes destes coletivos. Tais características amparam as práticas chamadas por Nascimento de quilombismo. O autor propõe entender o quilombismo como estratégia contemporânea de enfrentamento de diversas ordens promovida pelo coletivo afrodescendente diante das inúmeras formas de discriminação e racismo. O campo editorial, por sua vez, não fica imune às práticas excludentes. Vale ressaltar que Oliveira propõe a noção de “quilombos editoriais” para classificar as iniciativas responsáveis por grande parcela da produção e circulação intelectual afro-brasileira. Já o ethos discursivo, segundo Dominique Maingueneau, é construído em suas múltiplas relações com os outros (sujeitos e discursos) e como eles emergem na articulação entre variados elementos (verbais e não verbais, éticos e estéticos) os quais necessitam da incorporação do interlocutor para apreendê-los em um conjunto complexo de representações sociais e culturais. Acreditamos que a junção entre quilombismo e ethos oferece mecanismos que auxiliam na compreensão do processo de colocação no campo cultural das casas ou quilombos editoriais. Palavras-chave: Mazza edições; quilombismo; ethos discursivo.This article analyze the presentation speech contained on the MazzaEdiçõeswebsite (https://www.mazzaedicoes.com.br). We’ll take two essential categories: quilombism and the discursive ethos. The quilombos, according to Abdias do Nascimento, were not just social regimentations, constituted by enslaved people, in territories of colonial exploitation. Solidarity and resistance are hallmarks of these collectives. These characteristics support the practices called “quilombismo” by Nascimento. This author proposes to understand quilombism as a contemporary strategyfor confronting different orders promoted by the Afro-descendant collective in the face of countless forms of discrimination and racism. The editorial field, in turn, is not immuneto exclusionary practices. It is noteworthy that Oliveira proposes the notion of “editorial quilombos” to classify the initiatives responsible for a large portion of Afro-Brazilian intellectual production and circulation. The discursive ethos, according to Dominique Maingueneau, is constructed in its multiple relationships with others (subjects and discourses) and how they emerge in the articulation between various elements (verbal and non-verbal, ethical and aesthetic) which require the incorporation of the interlocutor to apprehend them in a complex set of social and cultural representations. We believe that the junction between quilombism and ethos offers mechanisms that help to understand the process of placing editorial houses or “quilombos” in the cultural field.Keywords: quilombism; discursiveethos.
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Memon, Aamir Raoof, Ishtiaq Ahmed, Nabiha Ghaffar, Kainat Ahmed, and Iqra Sadiq. "Where are female editors from low-income and middle-income countries? A comprehensive assessment of gender, geographical distribution and country’s income group of editorial boards of top-ranked rehabilitation and sports science journals." British Journal of Sports Medicine 56, no. 8 (January 24, 2022): 458–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2021-105042.

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ObjectiveWe aimed to examine the gender, geographical region and income group of the country of affiliation for editorial leadership (eg, editor-in-chief, section editor, associate editor) and advisors (eg, editorial board members) in top-ranked rehabilitation and sports science journals.MethodsA list of Scopus indexed, Q1 (25% top) rehabilitation and sports science journals, available under four different journal categories, was prepared based on the data from the Scientific Journal Rankings (SJR) website. The information for editorial leadership and advisors for these journals was obtained and their gender was determined through a multistep process. The country of affiliation of editorial leadership and advisors was used to categorise them to World Bank’s different geographical regions and income groups (for countries).ResultsThere were 7248 editors (35.7% leadership and 64.3% advisors) across 113 rehabilitation and sports science journals. Of all editors, 1792 (24.7%) were women. Women represented 24.5% of editorial leadership positions, 24.8% of advisory roles and 10.4% of editors-in-chief. Editors from South Asia (0.5%) and sub-Saharan Africa (0.6%) had the least representation, while those affiliated with institutions from high-income countries represented 93.5% of leadership roles and 93.1% of advisory positions. Moreover, editors affiliated with institutions from North America occupied almost half of all editorial roles.ConclusionsWomen and researchers affiliated with institutions from low-income and middle-income countries are under-represented on the editorial boards of top-ranked rehabilitation and sports science journals indexed in the Scopus database. Editors are responsible for promoting research in their specific field, and therefore, the current leadership in rehabilitation and sports science journals should consider diversifying their editorial boards by providing equitable opportunities to women and researchers from a broader geographical distribution.
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Bukhari, Seemab Far, Sehreen Far Bokhari, and Wafa Naz. "WHEN ALTERNATIVES EXIST! PROBING TELEOLOGICAL USE OF ENGLISH WORDS IN URDU EDITORIALS." Pakistan Journal of Social Research 04, no. 04 (December 31, 2022): 577–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.52567/pjsr.v4i04.871.

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Regionally and internationally, the competition between languages is increased because of globalisation. Both sociolinguistic and Journalistic schools have extensive evidence of how quickly and unpredictably English has expanded over the world in comparison to other major languages. By addressing the grey area between Journalism and Philosophy of Ethics, the study explores teleological use of English words in the editorial contents of mainstream Urdu Newspapers of Pakistan. It categorizes the Urdu words used in two mainstream Urdu newspapers i-e Jang and Nawa-i-Waqt into further categories to take an in depth analysis of their usage. The method used is content analysis. All the hypotheses are proven on the findings of P value as 0.000. The findings revealed that Daily Nawa-i-Waqt used more common English words in their editorial as compared to Daily Jang in the taken universe. Keywords: Teleological, communication and language, deontological, linguistic
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Howard, Rona. "BJOT: Types of Article." British Journal of Occupational Therapy 56, no. 11 (November 1993): 415–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030802269305601109.

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This article forms part of a symposium entitled ‘An introduction to Writing for Publication in Professional Journals’, prepared by the Editorial Board of BJOT. It divides published material into the broad categories of short and long articles and identifies classifications under each heading. Further papers in the symposium will discuss the structure of a Journal article, writing an editorial and writing a research article.
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MITKOV, RUSLAN. "Editorial note." Natural Language Engineering 23, no. 1 (December 16, 2016): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1351324916000358.

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In one of my previous editorial notes I promised that the positive developments of the Journal of Natural Language Engineering (JNLE) would be a continuous and common practice. I am proud to report that I have been able to keep this promise. JNLE has enjoyed another very successful year. The impact factor of the journal increased for the second consecutive year, with the journal listed both among the Linguistics and Computer Science categories. From 2016 onwards, JNLE is offering six 160-page issues per year, which by far exceeds the four 96-page issues from less than 10 years ago!
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Wotherspoon, Terry. "Migration, Boundaries and Differentiated Citizenship: Contested Frameworks for Inclusion and Exclusion." Social Inclusion 6, no. 3 (August 30, 2018): 153–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/si.v6i3.1692.

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Contemporary migration across borders is beset by contradictory pressures and challenges. Some borders remain relatively open, especially for potential immigrants with valued skills and assets or for humanitarian reasons, but in many other cases borders are becoming increasingly more regulated or impermeable. The differential capacities for mobility that accompany these developments are contributing to new categories and hierarchies of citizenship and belonging which are being shaped by and exacerbate significant social, economic and political inequalities. This editorial highlights core relationships that have emerged in the process of regulating geographical and social boundaries in different national contexts, focusing on the intersections between dynamics of social inclusion and exclusion and the construction of differential categories of citizenship. The editorial establishes a framework for the articles that follow in this thematic issue, emphasizing the contested, fragmented, variable and highly uneven nature of borders and citizenship regimes.
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Campbell, Gwyn. "Editorial Introduction." Journal of Indian Ocean World Studies 1, no. 1 (September 29, 2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.26443/jiows.v1i1.24.

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The Journal of Indian Ocean World Studies (JIOWS) is a multidisciplinary, open access journal that accepts articles on all aspects of the history and culture of the Indian Ocean World (IOW) – a macro-region that runs from Africa to the Far East, and includes the Indian Ocean, Indonesian and China seas and their continental hinterlands.This inaugural issue focuses on various instances of interaction in the IOW. From commercial exchange between otherwise opposing commercial enterprises, to personal interactions between Europeans and peoples indigenous to the IOW, to the experiences and strategies of slaves, the issue explores various instances in which categories of “foreign” and “indigenous” come into alignment or conflict in historiography, colonial narratives, or commercial enterprises.
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Chen, Chin-Tin. "Editorial for the Specific Issue: “Lipid-Based Nanocarriers”." Biomedicines 10, no. 7 (July 19, 2022): 1734. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10071734.

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Jones, Roy E. "Editorial." Review of International Studies 11, no. 4 (October 1, 1985): iii. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260210500114159.

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It is not simply because an inter-disciplinary journal is such a rarity that a retiring editor of the Review looks back on an unusual experience. In the variety of responses to the challenge of studying international relations two opposing general tendencies constantly assert themselves. One is the tendency to see international problems wholly in terms familiar to long established disciplines; the other is to define international relations so particularly as to exclude contributions from traditional modes of understanding. The existence of the Review suggests that its own correct and humane function is to moderate both these tendencies, without thereby depleting the ambition to create new styles of discourse or the determination to maintain the vigour of the old. Among its more demanding readership the Review may even stimulate efforts to transcend them. Selecting, commissioning and preparing material for publication with such aims in mind certainly tests the categories of the editor's own thinking to an unusual degree. For this experience he ought to be, and in the present case certainly is, duly grateful.
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Kalb, Don. "Editorial." Focaal 2005, no. 46 (December 1, 2005): v—vi. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/092012906780786771.

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This article introduces a series of ideas about the categories of science and politics, by way of actor network theory, Gell's theories of index and agency, and governmentality studies. It explores the ways in which science has become a discursive element in contemporary government, and examines the tensions between the purifying categorizations of politics and science, and the re-embedding (or hybridizing) of science into national political discourse. What emerges is a series of practices by which science is nationalized, domesticating the ideal of a generalized science into localized political debates at both national and sub-national levels, practices which may be transformed at national boundaries. While we acknowledge that science in practice is not abstract or generalizable (since it must engage with a world which is not abstracted), it is the abstracting and purifying work attributed to science which makes it attractive as a political alibi for particular political projects. Rather than seeing science as politics by other means, perhaps we should be examining the creation of a rehybridized science-politics.
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Fitzgerald, Timothy. "Critical religion and critical research on religion: A response to the April 2016 editorial." Critical Research on Religion 4, no. 3 (November 11, 2016): 307–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2050303216676524.

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This response takes up some of the editorial comments for further clarification and critique. My point has been that ‘politics’ is as much a modern invention as ‘religion’. We cannot understand the rhetorical function of ‘religion’ if we treat it as a stand-alone category referring to some supposed object or objects in the world. I am especially concerned here to keep in view the oscillating binary categories of which ‘religion' forms one parasitic half, and ‘politics' or ‘science' the other. This critical problematization of the liberal categories of the understanding opposes and challenges their current institutionalization in the liberal academy, where they now serve the Neoliberal agenda and the reproduction of the dominant, globalising imperatives of private property.
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Alharthi, Adel Awadh. "Comparative Analysis of Standardized Categories of the UN Resolution." International Journal of Language and Literary Studies 5, no. 1 (April 4, 2023): 358–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.36892/ijlls.v5i1.1286.

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The study aims to explore similarities and difference between English versions and Arabic versions/translations of the United Nations resolutions in relation to some standardized categories. It also investigates whether or not these similarities and differences are systematic. The study seeks to answer the following research questions: 1) What are the similarities and differences between English and Arabic versions/translations of the UN resolutions in relation to format and style and 2) Do these similarities and differences seem random or systematic. The research draws on the UN editorial Manual 1983 which include the basic guidelines of writing/translating the UN documents, including UN resolutions. The research used a qualitative approach which involves comparing and contrasting different English versions and Arabic versions/translations of the UN resolutions using a comparative model. The findings of the study showed that English versions and Arabic versions/translations shared some institutionally standardized features that are related to format (titles, headings and subheadings, and paragraphs and subparagraphs) and style ((abbreviations, acronyms, capitalization, italics, bold print, numbering, punctuation, and order and structure of elements). The versions also differed from each other in the use of some these features due to the huge linguistic gap between English and Arabic. This work contributes to existing knowledge of UN production/translation of documents by providing a deeper insight into the structure of these documents across two different languages. This issue is an intriguing one which could be usefully explored in further research, especially across the other official languages of the UN.
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Farooq, Sobia, and Zahid Yousaf. "MEDIA FRAMING AND FOREIGN POLICY- DECISION MAKING: AN ANALYSIS OF PAK CHINA RELATIONSHIP (MEDIA PERSPECTIVE JAN 2012 TO DEC 2013)." Pakistan Journal of Social Research 04, no. 02 (June 30, 2022): 1058–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.52567/pjsr.v4i2.601.

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The present research Media Framing and Foreign policy- Decision Making: An analysis of Pak China relationship (Media perspective Jan 2012 to Dec 2013) is related and focused on the Pak China foreign relations, its media framing and impact of media framing on policy formulation. Basically, this study analyses the role of both foreign policy makers on media how they make them to interpret the policies through editorials and of Media how they help in formulating the policies or in decision makings. This article analysis the relationship study of China with Pakistan with respect to mutual and national interest. It explores how china and Pakistan take stands on certain issues and formulates foreign relationship with each other according to its diplomatic relations and requirements. The study is the result of the content analysis of newspapers of Pakistan and China, the study emphasis on the editorial coverage of selected newspaper, it examines the content of selected editorials according to the selected categories, and it helps in analyzing the relationship between media content and foreign policy in the china and Pakistan. Keywords: Framing, national interest, foreign policy, Pakistan, China, democracy, and diplomatic relations.
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Chang, Edward, James Philpot, and George Swales. "Do Socially Responsible Mutual Funds Measure Up?" Journal of Finance Issues 5, no. 2 (December 31, 2007): 236–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.58886/jfi.v5i2.2629.

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This abstract was created post-production by the JFI Editorial Board. This paper examines characteristics, risk and performance measures of all available socially responsible funds (hereafter SRFs) in the U.S. mutual fund industry. In this study, SRFs include actively-managed funds and index funds. The two issues to be addressed are: (1) Do SRFs as a whole perform as well as the average of all mutual funds in their respective categories? and (2) Do actively-managed SRFs outperform index SRFs? The authors of this study find SRFs, as a whole, when compared with the average of all mutual funds in the same category, exhibit LOWER measures in most categories. "Do good" SRFs, with the exception of some bond categories, did not perform as well as other mutual funds in their own categories over the past fifteen years. Actively-managed SRFs as a whole, compared with index SRFs, appear to exhibit mostly higher measures over the three- and five-year periods.
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Sonuga-Barke, Edmund. "Editorial: The challenge of mapping diagnostic categories onto developmental pathophysiology: DSM-6 anyone?" Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 54, no. 6 (May 22, 2013): 601–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.12096.

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Brimblecombe, Peter, and John G. Watson. "Founding Editorial — Atmospheric Systems and TheScientificWorld." Scientific World JOURNAL 1 (2001): 235–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2001.53.

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There is a satisfying logic to the Greek choice of air, water, and earth as elements. Today we see this logic reflected in the way that that global science is subdivided into the categories of air, land, and water. Thus, the relevance of a science of global issues is not merely of academic interest. The tide of environmental concern, a vision of limits to growth, and a desire for sustainability have fostered an unprecedented interest in global sciences.
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Wilson, Ann. "Editorial." Canadian Theatre Review 123 (June 2005): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/ctr.123.fm.

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To begin, an observation about the topic which this issue of Canadian Theatre Review addresses: Theatre is discussed most often as art, but theatre is also a site of labour, as the existence of unions and professional bodies such as Actors’ Equity and the Professional Association of Canadian Theatres evinces. These organizations, and others like them, protect the working conditions of their members. Their function is crucial, but it is one that carries implications, as it organizes theatrical labour through what is, fundamentally, an industrial model, based on the segregation of workers into discrete categories of specialization. Some of the implications are problematic, as many of the articles in the issue suggest: The divide between various modes of labour in the theatre is not neat and tidy, particularly in the case of small companies, where the artistic director may also be an actor in, and director of, productions mounted by the company, as Sky Gilbert discusses; or, when professional theatre is being produced in northern Canada, as Michael Clark writes. In a blunt assessment of the state of labour relations in Canadian theatre, Ivan Habel argues that, in addressing the various conditions of work, the contractual protocols for actors have expanded into the cumbersome, if well-intentioned, Canadian Theatre Agreement. He argues that the unwieldy agreement requires an onerous commitment of time if it is to be implemented appropriately, suggesting that it has become largely inaccessible for those whom it ostensibly serves: theatre artists.
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Zadpoor, Amir A., Mohammad J. Mirzaali, Lorenzo Valdevit, and Jonathan B. Hopkins. "Design, material, function, and fabrication of metamaterials." APL Materials 11, no. 2 (February 1, 2023): 020401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0144454.

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Metamaterials are engineered materials with unusual, unique properties and advanced functionalities that are a direct consequence of their microarchitecture. While initial properties and functionalities were limited to optics and electromagnetism, many novel categories of metamaterials that have applications in many different areas of research and practice, including acoustic, mechanics, biomaterials, and thermal engineering, have appeared in the last decade. This editorial serves as a prelude to the special issue with the same title that presents a number of selected studies in these directions. In particular, we review some of the most important developments in the design and fabrication of metamaterials with an emphasis on the more recent categories. We also suggest some directions for future research.
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CANNING, CHARLOTTE. "Editorial: Performance and the Everyday." Theatre Research International 38, no. 3 (August 29, 2013): 179–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s030788331300028x.

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Where do the limits of performance and everyday life intersect? How do performance and life make sense of one another? The articles in this issue focus on the most basic and definitive categories of live performance: music, dance, theatre, performer, director, choreographer and, of course, audience. Taken as a whole, the seemingly disparate articles of this issue offer provocative approaches to understanding how practitioners create performance out of their experiences, and where audiences can connect their own experiences to what they see onstage. In doing so the authors collectively redefine the active relationship of a performance with its audience, and the powerful potential of that relationship.
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Martinić, Lorena, Ana Šafran Modrić, and Nikolina Štrbac. "Zagreb Library Association social media Editorial Board." BOSNIACA, no. 28 (December 10, 2023): 167–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.37083/bosn.2023.28.167.

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In this paper, we will present the Editorial Board of Social Networks of the Zagreb Library Association (ZLA), when it was founded, how it functions, and the challenges it faces. The article will mention which social networks the Editorial Board uses to promote ZLA, and its members, but also to attract new ones. The paper will further explain how the Editorial Board chooses content to publish and how it creates its own, original content. It will present in detail all original categories, both ongoing and finished, and a free online visual editor used by the Editorial Board. The second part of this paper will present the analysis of the activities on each social network where ZLA has active profiles (Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Twitter (today X), YouTube, Pinterest, TikTok). These statistical data will be compared: page followers and number of posts in each year from the beginning of 2020 to the first half of the current year. It will also be analysed to what extent the number of posts and their content affects the followers’ growth on each of the social networks. In conclusion, the paper will argue that content is not enough, it is also important how often it is published. It will present differences in the popularity and usage of social networks, the dynamics of publishing, and the choice of format, which the Editorial Board thinks is sometimes more important than the content. Finally, it will show the importance of its own, original content, which sets this Editorial Board apart from the content of social networks of other associations, libraries, and book bloggers. Thanks to high-quality and inspiring content, attractive visuals for announcements, and a well-thought-out publishing schedule, the Editorial Board has reached an enviable number of followers with whom it interacts regularly
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Tymofieiev, Oleksii. "Minister Brings the Best World Standards to the Ukrainian Scientific Publications." Journal of Diagnostics and Treatment of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology 2, no. 3 (September 30, 2018): 106–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.23999/j.dtomp.2018.3.1.

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Improvement is always great. Improvement in the science of oral and maxillofacial surgery is more than great. Especially, when that improvement is supported and implemented at the highest level of Government. Order #32 of the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine (issued January 15, 2018) accelerate the movement of the Ukrainian scientific publications to the best positions in the extremely dynamic world of scientific publication. The purpose of that Editorial is to highlight the features of a new Order. According the Order all Ukrainian scientific publications, which are in the List of scientific professional publications of Ukraine, divided into three categories till the year 2020: “A”, “B”, and “C” [1]. After March 2020 there will be only two categories: “A” and “B”.
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Nasution, Nella Darbiah, Diah Kusyani, and Siti Fatimah Zahara. "PENGARUH MODEL PEMBELAJARAN THINK TALK WRITE TERHADAP KEMAMPUAN MENULIS TEKS EDITORIAL." Jurnal Bahasa Indonesia Prima (BIP) 5, no. 1 (March 21, 2023): 27–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.34012/jbip.v5i1.3351.

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This research was conducted to find out how the influence of the think talk write learning model on students' ability to write editorial texts properly and correctly. This research was located at the PAB 1 Helvetia Vocational School, Jl. Veterans Psr. IV Pulo Brayan Medan. The method in this research uses the one-group pretest-posttest experimental model and random sampling technique with a total population of 126 students. The data collection tool used was a written test in the form of an essay. The ability to write editorial texts using the think talk write learning model obtained perfect scores for 6 students with a percentage of 17.6%. The excellent category is 23 students, with a percentage of 67.6%. Enough category as many as 5 students with a percentage of 14.7%. However, for the fewer and significantly fewer categories, none were found. This means that the ability to write editorial texts is at a good level due to the influence of the think-talk write learning model. Thus the hypothesis is accepted, namely that there is an influence of the think talk write learning model on the ability to write editorial texts in XII students of SMK PAB 1 Helvetia in the 2022-2023 academic year.
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Syeed, Sayyid M. "EDITORIAL." American Journal of Islam and Society 10, no. 3 (October 1, 1993): v—vii. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v10i3.2487.

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Ftom the papets presented at the twenty-first annual conference of theAMSS in 1992, we have chosen here Sirajul Hussain's short article on"Islamic Science: Making of a Formal Intellectual Discipline." The otherpapets presented at the conference are being published sepamtely in theform of conference proceedings and should be available in one volumeat the twenty-second mual conference. This will be held at the headquartersof the IIIT on 15-17 October 1993.In this paper, Sirajul Hussain discusses some epistemological issuesrelated to the foundation of "Islamic science" as a formal intellectual discipline.He stresses the need for establishing an ontological necessity forthe uniquely monotheistic concept of tawbiii in Islam in terms of recentdevelopments in neuropsychology. This would show that the tuwltidiepisteme proceeds essentially in a purely non-Euclidean space. In thisway, we can show that the tuwh7liepisteme is amenable to scientificcorroboration. He also emphasizes the need to structure Islamic scienceas a formal academic course to be taught at the undergraduate and gtaduatelevels.Dilnawaz Siddiqui discusses selected major issues in instrUCti0~1-communication technology from an Islamic perspective. He tries to laythe groundwork by identifying major issues from a broad Islamic view.In addition, he outlines theoretical assumptions behind the identificationand analysis of instructional technology and develops six sets of relevantissues classified under the categories of humanity, message, medium,methods, milieu, and measurement.Mumtaz Jafari examines critically the objectives, the evolutionarycontext, and the value system in which counseling flourishes. Right at theoutset, he makes it clear that he is not providing an alternative frameworkbased on Islamic teachings. Rather, he is making a modest attempt toexamine critically the parameters of western counseling in order to illustratethe contrast between fundamental premises of Islamic ideology andpractice. The framework used is the Islamic outlook on life and the associatedobjectives and values that Islam regards as determinants of human ...
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Katsoyiannis, Ioannis A., and Vincenzo Torretta. "Innovative Approaches for Drinking- and Waste-Water Treatment: An Editorial Review Summarizing and Assessing the Findings of the Special Issue." Applied Sciences 11, no. 5 (February 26, 2021): 2063. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/app11052063.

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The present special issue collected articles that address the very important topic of innovative approaches in water and wastewater treatment technologies. Thirteen articles are published, ten research paper and three review articles. The papers can be divided in four major categories, namely, membrane treatment, adsorption studies, advanced oxidation processes and wastewater treatment optimization. In the editorial, a brief description of the findings of each paper is presented along with a critical assessment.
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Abugideiri, Hibba. "Editorial." American Journal of Islam and Society 13, no. 4 (January 1, 1996): v—vi. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v13i4.2284.

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With this issue of AJISS, we bring this volume to a close. This year hasbrought many changes to AJISS, not only in the scope of Islamic issueshighlighted within the articles, but also in the range of opinions articulatedby their authors. As a fourm for intellectual debates on issues relating toIslam, MISS strives to “push the intellectual envelope” of Islamic thought.No subject matter better reflects this attempt than the issue of women,which many articles in this issue analyze.In her article “Oikos/polis Conflict: Perspectives of Gender Feministsand Islamic Revivalists,” Zeenath Kausar examines the continuing debateon women’s political participation in order to demonstrate “how genderfeminists prefer women’s political participation at the cost of deconstructinggender and family, whereas contemporary Islamic revivalists “supportand encourage women’s political participation-but not at the expense offamily and the distinct identity of women.” After a brief survey of feministphilosophy and Muslim revivalist discourse, Kausar concludes that genderfeminists create an atmosphere of conflict between men and women, whileMuslim revivalists look at men and women as copartners in constructingcivilization.In questioning exactly this notion of copartnership between men andwomen, Hibba Abugideiri undertakes, in her “Allegorical Gender: TheFigure of Eve Revisited,” a discourse analysis of classical Islamic texts inorder to uncover how gender categories were constructed by classicalexegetes. By focusing on the figure of Eve, which “has not only definedthe identity of Muslim woman: it has also set the parameters for how thatidentity has been forged,” she questions the authoritative value and relevanceof the classical view of Eve for contemporary social demands.Underlying her Qur’anic rereading of Eve’s role in the parable of creationlies the goal of forging a new methodological approach to Islamic issuesthat need to be redressed, particularly in light of the current wave ofIslamic revivalism.Finally, in her review essay “Muslim Women’s Studies: Two Contributions,”Mohja Kahf engages in a critical analysis of two gender historiesthat interface nicely with Abugideiri’s study. Here, Kahf reviews two foraysinto the field of Muslim women’s studies that uncover the place of ...
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Gütl, Christian. "Editorial." JUCS - Journal of Universal Computer Science 29, no. 3 (March 28, 2023): 201–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jucs.103612.

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Dear Readers,  It gives me great pleasure to announce the third regular issue of 2023. In this issue, 4 papers by 11 authors from 5 countries cover various topical aspects of computer science. In an ongoing effort to further strengthen our journal, I would like to expand the editorial board: If you are a tenured associate professor or above with a strong publication record, you are welcome to apply to join our editorial board. We are also interested in high-quality proposals for special issues on new topics and trends.  As always, I would like to thank all the authors for their sound research and the editorial board for their extremely valuable review effort and suggestions for improvement. These contributions, together with the generous support of the consortium members, sustain the quality of our journal.  In the third regular issue, I am very pleased to introduce the following 4 accepted articles: Gerardo Matturro from Uruguay reports on his research findings on undergraduate software engineering over a seven-year period, specifically on students' motivation to participate in research projects, skills acquired, and their perceptions of benefits. Uma Priya D and P. Santhi Thilagam from India propose an approach to cluster heterogeneous JSON documents using the similarity fusion method based on structural, semantic and contextual measures of JSON schemas. Zeinab Rahimi and Mehrnoush Shamsfard from Iran present a hybrid contradiction detection approach that can detect seven categories of contradictions in Persian texts: Antonymy, negation, numerical, factive, structural, lexical and world knowledge, which is based on a novel data mining method and a transformer-based deep neural method for contradiction detection. In their joint research between Estonia, Spain and India, Shashi Kant Shankar, Adolfo Ruiz-Calleja, Luis P. Prieto, María Jesús Rodríguez-Triana, Pankaj Chejara, and Sandesh Tripathi discuss a modular and modifiable infrastructure for data preparation, organization, and fusion to partially support the development of context-aware multimodal learning analytics solutions.  Enjoy Reading! Cordially, 
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48

Gorman, Michael F. "Editorial: Interfaces/INFORMS Journal on Applied Analytics Hall of Fame Contributors." INFORMS Journal on Applied Analytics 50, no. 6 (November 2020): 396–402. http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/inte.2020.1057.

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As Interfaces/INFORMS Journal on Applied Analytics (INT/IJAA) celebrates its 50th anniversary, the journal would like to recognize its biggest contributors over its history. This article reports the researchers and practitioners who have contributed the most in a number of categories, such as full-length articles and practice abstracts, editorials, columns, and book and application reviews. The authors are ranked by appearances in the journal and by the Rothkopf ranking method. Thanks to these Hall of Famers and all of you who have helped to make INT/IJAA a success!
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49

Imran, Muhammad, and Zubair Shafiq Jatoi. "Perception of Pak-China Relations in International Press: Comparative Analysis." Journal of Peace, Development & Communication V05, no. 03 (October 21, 2021): 161–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.36968/jpdc-v05-i03-12.

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This research has been conducted to examine the coverage and slant of the China-Pakistan bilateral relationship in the editorial pages (including Editorials and columns) of four noted newspapers (The New York Times, Times of India, Global Times, and Daily Dawn) in the world. The topic contains media coverage of most of the important developments, such as the "China-Pakistan Economic Corridor" and "Military and Strategic Cooperation", during the time period of January 2015 to December 2019. Quantitative and qualitative content analysis methods were applied to examine the selected categories of Sino-Pak relations. Coverage is analyzed in three dimensions, including positive, negative, and neutral, to develop balanced criticism, taking into account both the frequency and the severity of the reporting. The theoretical basis is based on hypotheses taken from the theory of framing. The study concluded that the Pakistani press gave more coverage to the stories related to Sino-Pak relations than other selected newspapers. Moreover, the Pakistani and Chinese press portray positive, while the Indian and American press covers it negatively. The study contributes to understanding the perception of the international press about regional affairs.
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50

Artz, Kerstin, and Holger Wormer. "What recipients ask for: An analysis of ‘user question generated’ science coverage." Journalism 12, no. 7 (September 8, 2011): 871–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884911412826.

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This article analyses the potential of ‘user question generated content’ related to science coverage with the aim of rethinking editorial selection in science journalism. The analysis builds partly on a previous paper which proposed a modified theory of news values for science journalism. The present article is based on a differentiated content analysis of 6528 user-generated questions 1 to science editors in three German media (print, radio and television) with different target groups with respect to age, educational background and gender. A total of 3530 questions could be assigned to different scientific categories. Comparing the most popular categories with the most popular topics found in classical content analyses of science coverage, some important differences were found. In the conclusion, the potential of such audience-oriented surveys for the further development of science journalism in the digital age is discussed.
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