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1

Tokarski, Jan. Schematyczny indeks "a tergo" polskich form wyrazowych. Warszawa: Wydawn. Nauk. PWN, 1993.

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2

Frelick, Bill. Reversal of fortune: Yugoslavia's refugee crisis since the ethnic Albanian return to Kosovo. Washington, D.C: U.S. Committee for Refugees, 2000.

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3

V, Sekher T., and Institute for Social and Economic Change., eds. Can career-minded young women reverse gender discrimination? Bangalore: Institute for Social and Economic Change, 2007.

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4

Sallie, Batson, ed. RetroAge: The four-step program to reverse the aging process. New York: Berkley Books, 1997.

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5

A, Yetter Jeffrey, and Langley Research Center, eds. Static performance of six innovative thrust reverser concepts for subsonic transport applications: Summary of the NASA Langley Innovative Thrust Reverser Test Program. Hampton, Va: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Langley Research Center, 2000.

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6

Singer, Marilyn. Follow follow: A book of reverso poems. New York: Dial Books for Young Readers, 2013.

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7

MaCurdy, Thomas E. Reform reversed?: The restoration of welfare benefits to immigrants in California. San Francisco: Public Policy Institute of California, 1998.

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8

TREASURY, GREAT BRITAIN. Secondary legislation for the regulation of home reversion and home purchase plans: A consultation. Norwich: HM Treasury, 2006.

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9

Total health turnaround: The all-natural plan to reverse adrenal fatigue, lose weight, and feel better fast. Emmaus, Pennsylvania: Rodale, 2014.

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10

Lemos, Patrícia Faga Iglecias. Resíduos sólidos e responsabilidade civil pós-consumo: Lei da política nacional de resíduos sólidos (Lei 12,305/2010), Decreto regulamentador (Dec. 7,404/2010), Responsabilidade compartilhada, logística reversa. São Paulo, SP, Brasil: Editora Revista dos Tribunais, 2011.

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11

ill, Cole Babette, ed. The Seems: the lost train of thought. New York: Bloomsbury Children's Books, 2009.

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12

If I were you. London: Bloomsbury, 2009.

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13

Ebigbo, P. O. Rehabilitation of children with mental and learning disabilities in Nigeria: 22 years experience of the TDCC, Enugu : (inclusion, mainstreaming, integration, reverse integration, non-discrimination, tolerance, therapeutic pedagogy, speech training, and more). Abakpa Nike, Enugu: Therapeutic Day Care Centre, 2002.

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14

Viterna, Jocelyn, José Santos Guardado Bautista, Silvia Ivette Juarez Barrios, and Alba Evelyn Cortez. Governance and the Reversal of Women’s Rights. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198829591.003.0012.

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States’ governance of gender is not unidirectional. In addition to stagnation and progress, there can be an active reversal of women’s rights. Using the case of abortion rights in El Salvador, this chapter investigates the following questions. What are the likely causes of rights reversals? How might rights reversals be more consequential for women’s lives than rights stagnations? And how might studying rights reversals as separate and distinct phenomena improve our scholarly understanding of the relationship between gender and development more broadly? Examining the full range of possible transformations in state governance (reversals, stagnations, and progress), we conclude, results in improved theory and more effective interventions.
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15

Wils, Clara. Form and Fury: An Epic Fantasy Reverse Harem. Gryphon's Gate Publishing, 2022.

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16

Hunter, Jennifer M., and Thomas Fuchs-Buder. Neuromuscular blockade and reversal. Edited by Michel M. R. F. Struys. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199642045.003.0016.

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Over the past 70 years since the introduction of d-tubocurarine, the search for an ideal neuromuscular blocking agent has led to the development of the depolarizing drug, succinylcholine (suxamethonium), with its rapid onset of action and plasma metabolism, and a series of non-depolarizing agents of which there are two groups: benzylisoquinoliniums (e.g. atracurium, cisatracurium and mivacurium) and aminosteroidal agents (e.g. pancuronium, vecuronium and rocuronium). The need to monitor neuromuscular block perioperatively to ensure the appropriate dose of any neuromuscular blocking drug is given has led to the development of several nerve stimulation techniques. Particularly useful clinically are the train-of-four twitch response, double-burst stimulation, and the post-tetanic count. Their benefits and limitations are considered in this chapter. The most suitable equipment to monitor neuromuscular block and the appropriate anatomical sites for stimulation are discussed. To prevent residual block with its pathophysiological consequences such as upper airway and pharyngeal dysfunction and potential respiratory failure at the end of surgery, antagonizing agents are used. These are of two types: anticholinesterases such as neostigmine and edrophonium, and the γ‎-cyclodextrin, sugammadex. The pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of neuromuscular blocking drugs and their antagonists are altered by the extremes of age, obesity, and several disease states including renal and hepatic failure, neuromuscular disorders, and critical illness. The altered response to all these drugs in these pathologies, which is related to their metabolism and excretion, is considered in detail, together with their other side-effects including the particular disadvantages to the use of succinylcholine.
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17

Wijdicks, Eelco F. M., and Sarah L. Clark. Anticoagulation and Reversal Drugs. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190684747.003.0007.

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Management of anticoagulation, is a common practice. This chapter discusses best approaches, heparin choices, and safety issues. Anticoagulation is required in immobilized patients in the neurosciences intensive care unit to prevent deep venous thrombosis and the more consequential pulmonary embolus. There are very few strong indications for anticoagulation in ischemic stroke and exceptions are discussed. Reversal of anticoagulation is also needed in some patients and certainly in patients with recent significant trauma or spontaneous hemorrhages. Current reversal protocols require intravenous vitamin K, fresh-frozen plasma, and more often, prothrombin complex concentrate. Reversal of the effect of the direct oral anticoagulants is more difficult but options are discussed.
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18

Papathomas, Thomas V. Reverse-Perspective Art and Objects—Illusions in Depth and Motion. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199794607.003.0030.

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The main goal of this chapter is to present the relatively new art form of reverspectives, invented and refined by Patrick Hughes. Reverspectives are painted on nonplanar surfaces that jut out of the wall, yet the painted scenery contains strong reverse-perspective cues that cause depth reversal: convex and concave parts are perceived as concave and convex, respectively. Reverspectives also appear to move vividly as viewers move past them. The chapter presents a wide variety of reverspectives, as well as a related class of illusions that are painted on large spheres, producing depth inversion and illusory motion. The chapter provides a plausible explanation for the percepts obtained with these types of stimuli.
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19

Abboud, Salim E., Dean A. Nakamoto, and John R. Haaga. Local Administration of Fresh Frozen Plasma and Platelets in the Critically Ill Patient. Edited by S. Lowell Kahn, Bulent Arslan, and Abdulrahman Masrani. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199986071.003.0104.

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The locally injected blood elements (LIBE) technique represents a useful alternative to systemic administration of blood products to reduce the risk of periprocedural hemorrhage in coagulopathic patients. The LIBE technique results in the creation of a “seroma” of platelets and/or blood products along the expected needle or instrument path to allow a high-quality blood clot to form, and it requires relatively less blood products compared to the more traditional systemic administration technique. Indications for LIBE include and expand on those for systemic administration of blood products to reverse pre-procedural coagulopathy, including contraindications to systemic reversal of pharmacologic anticoagulation, precarious fluid volume status, severe coagulopathy unlikely to normalize with systemic administration of blood products, patient history of adverse reaction to systemic administration of blood products, and limited availability of the desired blood product.
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20

Pappas-Kelley, Jared. Solvent Form. Manchester University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526129246.001.0001.

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Solvent form examines the destruction of art—through objects that have been destroyed (lost in fires, floods, vandalism, or similarly those artists that actively court or represent this destruction, such as Gustav Metzger), but also as a process within art that the object courts through form. In this manner, Solvent form looks to events such as the Momart warehouse fire in 2004 as well as the actions of art thief Stéphane Breitwieser in which the stolen work was destroyed. Against this overlay, a tendency is mapped whereby individuals attempt to conceptually gather these destroyed or lost objects, to somehow recoup in their absence. From this vantage, Solvent form—hinging on the dual meaning in the words solvent and solvency—proposes an idea of art as an attempt to secure and fix, which correspondingly undoes and destroys through its inception. It also weaves a narrative of art that intermingles with Jean Baudrillard’s ideas on disappearance, Georges Bataille and Paul Virilio’s negative or reverse miracle, Jean-Luc Nancy’s concept of the image (or imago as votive that keeps present the past, yet also burns), and Giorgio Agamben’s notion of art as an attempt to make the moment appear permeable. Likewise, it is through these destructions that one might distinguish a solvency within art and catch an operation in which something is made visible through these moments of destruction when art’s metaphorical undoing emerges as oddly literal.
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21

Retallack, James. Suffrage Reform as Coup d’État. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199668786.003.0008.

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In the period 1894 to 1902 Saxons demonstrated that the expansion of voting rights could be slowed and actually reversed. This chapter shows how right-wing politicians, statesmen, municipal councilors, and others used a perceived crisis following political assassinations in mid-1894 to refocus middle-class fears on the “threat” of socialism. At the national level, calls for a coup d’état against the Reichstag dovetailed with less dramatic calls to action against Social Democracy. When these appeals yielded meager results, Saxons responded by passing a reform of their Landtag’s suffrage in 1896: it replaced a relatively equitable system with unequal three-class voting. Socialists disappeared from the Landtag, and the Reichstag elections of 1898 were unexciting. In the period 1898–1902 Saxon Conservatism reached the zenith of its power. But Social Democratic outrage over “suffrage robbery” had already planted the seeds of a political reversal.
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22

Hamilton, Virginia. Reversal of Fortune: Yugoslavia's Refugee Crisis since the Ethnic Albanian Ruturn to Kosovo. U S Committee for Refugees, 2000.

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23

Müller, Wolfgang C., and Paul W. Thurner, eds. Understanding Policy Reversals and Policy Stability. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198747031.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses structural, institutional, and situational factors that exercise influence on nuclear energy policy decisions. It reviews the respective literatures and introduces the dependent variable, i.e. nuclear energy policy reversals. Building in particular on the work of Kitschelt (1986) and Midttun and Rucht (1994), the chapter then discusses the explanatory variables that potentially drive such changes: anti-nuclear movements, public opinion, the systems’ electoral and federal openness, political parties’ vote-seeking, principled ideological goals, or office-seeking, new policy challenges in terms of energy policy and climate change concerns, nuclear accidents, and path dependence due to the countries investment in nuclear energy. Hypotheses are formulated for how these factors impact nuclear energy policy-making.
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24

Watkinson, Duncan J., and Pascal Boileau. Reverse geometry replacement. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199550647.003.004013.

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♦ RSR provides a unique tool for patients with cuff tear arthropathy♦ RSR is a useful tool for fractures, tumours, and revision of shoulder replacements♦ However RSR comes with specific complications such as scapular notching and acromial fractures♦ The 10 year results of RSR show that prosthetic loosening is no more frequent than with anatomical prostheses.
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25

Connelly, Stephen. Leibniz: A Contribution to the Archaeology of Power. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474418065.001.0001.

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The concept of power has been a major feature of natural law theories. It evolved over the course of several centuries and was arguably the defining notion in both Hobbes’ and Spinoza’s doctrines of natural right. Yet Leibniz appears to effect a reversal in this millennium-long trajectory and demotes power to a derivative term of his philosophy. What was the rationale behind this radical change? And what does this reversal mean for the philosophy that follows?
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26

Mehta, Rupal N. Delaying Doomsday. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190077976.001.0001.

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Why are states willing to give up their nuclear weapons programs? This book presents a new theory for how external inducements supplied by the United States can convince even the most committed of proliferators to abandon weapons pursuit. Existing theories focus either on carrots or sticks. I explore how using both positive and negative inducements, in the shadow of military force, can persuade both friends and foes not to continue their nuclear weapons pursuit. I draw on worldwide cross-national data on nuclear reversal, case studies of Iran and North Korea, among other countries, and interviews with diplomats, policy-makers, and analysts. I show that the majority of proliferators have been persuaded to reverse their nuclear weapons programs when offered incentives from the United States. Moreover, I demonstrate that these tools are especially effective during periods of leadership transition and can work on both allies and adversaries. My theory and evidence also suggest a broader conception of counterproliferation than currently exists, identifying how carrots and sticks used together can accomplish one of the international community’s most important policy objectives.
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27

McDonald, Vickie, and Marie Scully. Anticoagulants and antithrombotics in critical illness. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199600830.003.0051.

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Coagulation is best thought of using the cell-based model of coagulation. Patients commenced on heparin therapy should have their platelet count monitored early because of the risk of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia, which can occur on any type or dose of heparin. Emergency reversal of warfarin should be with prothrombin complex concentrate (containing factors II, VII, IX, and X) and not fresh frozen plasma. New oral anticoagulants have the advantage of predictable pharmacokinetics and do not require routine monitoring, but optimal reversal strategies for these agents are not clear. Thrombolytic agents lead to variable degrees of systemic lysis, which may cause haemorrhage, including intracerebral haemorrhage
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28

Grayson, James Huntley. The accommodation of Korean folk religion to the religious forms of Buddhism: An example of reverse syncretism. 1992.

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29

Batson, Hattie, and Sallie Batson. Retro-Age: The Four-step Program to Reverse the Aging Process. Berkley Trade, 1997.

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30

Shemtov, Noam. On Reverse Engineering and Decompilation. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198716792.003.0003.

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This chapter examines reverse engineering and the decompilation of computer programs, both of which are highly regulated under the current copyright regime. It begins with a practical overview of reverse engineering and decompilation of software, focusing on types of reverse engineering prevalent in the software industry, the various stages of reverse engineering, and the motivation and methods for reverse engineering. It then looks at the reasons for and benefits of decompilation, which is a category of reverse engineering, and examines software interoperability. At this stage the chapter considers what EU and US copyright laws say about decompilation, with particular emphasis on the role that the idea-expression dichotomy plays in decompilation scenarios. It also discusses the problem of entitlement with respect to intellectual property rules, and more specifically in the case of decompilation of computer programs. It provides a critical evaluation of Article 6 of the Software Directive in enabling decompilation in order to achieve interoperability. The chapter concludes with a commentary on reverse engineering in the cloud environment under copyright law.
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31

Christenson, Gary A. H. The Assessment and Treatment of Trichotillomania. Edited by Jon E. Grant and Marc N. Potenza. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195389715.013.0095.

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The successful treatment of trichotillomania necessitates an initial clinical evaluation of the cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and situational characteristics contributing to an individual’s hair pulling. Assessment also requires a comprehensive psychological/psychiatric interview to assess for comorbid illness, which may either contribute to hair pulling or require separate attention. Several instruments have been designed to assist in quantifying the core symptoms of trichotillomania and can be useful for monitoring treatment progress over time. Treatment approaches include medication, hypnosis, and behavioral therapies, especially modifications of habit reversal therapy. Controlled studies are few in number and are limited to only a few behavioral treatment approaches and medication classes. Research suggests that variations of habit reversal therapy have the greatest efficacy of the interventions investigated thus far. There is additional support for treatment with clomipramine, N-acetylcysteine, and olanzapine, in contrast to multiple other drugs that have been studied or suggested as useful for trichotillomania.
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32

Biomechanical factors affecting height achieved by female competitors during forward and reverse dives. 1991.

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33

Biomechanical factors affecting height achieved by female competitors during forward and reverse dives. 1990.

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34

Biomechanical factors affecting height achieved by female competitors during forward and reverse dives. 1991.

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35

Austin, Michael W. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198830221.003.0006.

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This brief concluding chapter includes a summary of the book’s main points, chapter by chapter. It also includes a brief meditation on the portion of John’s gospel, John 13:1–17, in which Jesus serves his disciples by washing their feet. The act itself expresses humility, a fact that is underscored by the reversal of social roles that it exemplifies. It is especially striking that Jesus washes the feet of Judas, who would soon betray him. This reversal of social roles not only exemplifies the moral virtue of humility, it also provides a model for followers of Christ to imitate in daily life. The foot washing can also serve as a reminder to those who seek to exemplify the Christian virtue of humility, namely, that there are opportunities to do so in small, everyday situations.
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36

Follow Follow a Book of Reverso Poems. Scholastic Inc, 2013.

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37

Baer, James A. Deportations and Reverse Migration, 1902–1910. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038990.003.0004.

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This chapter focuses on the anarchist movement in Argentina to 1910, as its ties to Spain were reinforced through deportations from Argentina as well as continued immigration from Spain. The Argentine government passed the Residency Law after strikes and labor unrest in 1902, which allowed the deportation of unruly immigrants. Deportations of anarchists then occurred sporadically until the 1930s. Many deported writers, editors, and activists remained active after returning to Spain. Juana Rouco Buela, deported in 1907 for her role in an anarchist feminist organization, took part in the movement in Spain before returning surreptitiously to Argentina. Antonio Loredo had been a member of the editorial board of the anarchist daily La Protesta prior to his 1909 deportation and later surfaced as an editor of Barcelona's influential anarchist newspaper, Tierra y Libertad. These deportations of Spanish anarchists show not only that population movements can be involuntary as well as voluntary, but also that these returnees brought experiences and ideas from Argentina.
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38

Kahn, S. Lowell. Techniques for Forming Large Reverse Curve Catheters. Edited by S. Lowell Kahn, Bulent Arslan, and Abdulrahman Masrani. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199986071.003.0063.

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Reverse curve catheters facilitate catheterization of vessels angled oppositely from the point of access. Most commonly, they are used to access caudally angulated vessels from a femoral approach. An array of these catheters exists, and their utilization greatly expands the options for intervention from any single access. Once formed, the catheters are gently advanced forward until their tip engages the vessel of interest, typically confirmed with an injection of contrast under live fluoroscopy. Engagement of the vessel is then performed by advancing a guidewire into the vessel of interest and retracting the catheter to seat the tip more distally within the vessel, providing a stable access. This chapter reviews four techniques for forming large reverse curve catheters.
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39

Harrington, Clodagh, and Alex Waddan. Obama v. Trump. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474447003.001.0001.

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This monograph examines how Trump’s election as President signals a rollback of the Obama years. In 2008, in what seemed a seminal moment for the country’s politics, the United States elected an African American as President. Yet, eight years later, in the form of Donald Trump, the nation put in office a man who was the very antithesis of his predecessor. The book determines what can legitimately be regarded as the legacy of the Obama presidency and investigates how far the Trump administration has reversed it. The analysis is embedded in a historical context, based on examination and scrutiny of how, and how successfully, presidents in the modern era have overturned the work of their predecessor when they have attempted to do so. The authors focus on meaningful priority shifts, policy changes and the imprint of presidential leadership, providing a framework for assessing Obama’s legacy, which in turn affords context to a discussion of the Trump administration’s capacity to fulfil its promise to reverse the direction taken by the Obama White House. Looking beyond the noise and hyperbole, the book examines how robust the Obama legacy has proved to be in the face of Trump’s challenge. Clodagh Harrington is Associate Professor of American Politics at De Montfort University. Alex Waddan is Associate Professor in American Politics at the University of Leicester.
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40

Greger, Michael. The How Not To Die Cookbook: Over 100 Recipes to Help Prevent and Reverse Disease. Bluebird, 2018.

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41

Accident claims digest, 2001 to 2005: Transport and accident cases alongwith list of cases overruled, reversed, followed, relied on, distinguished, etc. Allahabad: T.A.C. Publications, 2006.

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42

Thurner, Paul W., ed. Germany. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198747031.003.0007.

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This chapter discusses German nuclear energy policy in the entire post-war period. The use of nuclear energy gradually declined after a peak in the 1990s. Three major policy reversals occurred: first, the phasing-out phase by the SPD-Green government from 2002, second, a partial annulment of those measures by the CDU/CSU-FDP government in 2010, and, third, a new phasing-out phase after the Fukushima catastrophe in 2011. The chapter argues that the features of the German electoral system in combination with the decentralized federal system allowed a Green Party to cross the thresholds of parliamentary representation and relevance (executive participation) and to become the ‘owner’ of the nuclear energy issue. This issue ownership was essential for maintaining a high level of attention to nuclear energy and made possible the policy reversals.
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43

Janssen, Ted, Gervais Chapuis, and Marc de Boissieu. Description and symmetry of aperiodic crystals. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824442.003.0002.

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This chapter first introduces the mathematical concept of aperiodic and quasiperiodic functions, which will form the theoretical basis of the superspace description of the new recently discovered forms of matter. They are divided in three groups, namely modulated phases, composites, and quasicrystals. It is shown how the atomic structures and their symmetry can be characterized and described by the new concept. The classification of superspace groups is introduced along with some examples. For quasicrystals, the notion of approximants is also introduced for a better understanding of their structures. Finally, alternatives for the descriptions of the new materials are presented along with scaling symmetries. Magnetic systems and time-reversal symmetry are also introduced.
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44

Kahn, S. Lowell. Reverse Deployment of the Gore Excluder Contralateral Iliac Limbs for Aortoiliac Interventions. Edited by S. Lowell Kahn, Bulent Arslan, and Abdulrahman Masrani. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199986071.003.0009.

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Aortoiliac occlusive disease and aneurysmal disease are common pathologies encountered by the interventionalist. There are a multitude of commercially available bifurcated grafts for use in aortoiliac disease, but these devices are costly and require at least a 14 Fr femoral access for deployment. This chapter describes a simple and safe method for reversing deployment of the Excluder contralateral limb. This has great utility not only for aortoiliac interventions but also for central venous stenoses/occlusions. Reversal of the limb allows a proximal diameter of 12–27 mm with a fixed distal diameter of 16 mm. The technique requires use of a 12–15 Fr sheath, most commonly a 12 Fr sheath.
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45

Stiller, Birgit, Ulrich Seyfarth, and Gerd Leuchs. Temporal and spectral properties of quantum light. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198768609.003.0004.

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This chapter starts from the classical optics description of a light field and its spectral densities, their measurement, and their interpretation, and discusses how these aspects are related to the quantum properties of a single light mode. It reviews ways to measure these quantum properties. Emphasis is placed on Gaussian states of a light mode, i.e. states for which the Wigner function has a two-dimensional Gaussian shape. The discussion continues with a description of more than one mode, and a unifying approach to quadratic Hamiltonians is presented, including phase conjugation, which is related to time reversal.
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46

Crowley, Chris, Henry S. Lodge, and Bill Fabrocini. Younger Next Year : the Exercise Program: Use the Power of Exercise to Reverse Aging and Stay Strong, Fit, and Sexy. Workman Publishing Company, Incorporated, 2015.

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47

Grant, Jon E., Sarah A. Redden, and Eric W. Leppink. Trichotillomania and Skin Picking Disorder. Edited by Christopher Pittenger. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190228163.003.0051.

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This chapter summarizes the clinical characteristics and treatment of trichotillomania and skin picking disorder (excoriation), collectively known as body focused repetitive behavior disorders. These two conditions are found in the new chapter on OCD and related disorders in DSM-5; skin picking disorder is a new DSM diagnosis. They are conceptualized as related to OCD due to the repetitive nature of the symptomatology, but they also differ in important ways. The neural underpinnings of these disorder are only beginning to come into focus, and much work is needed. The best-proven psychotherapy for these conditions is a form of CBT known as habit reversal therapy. Principles of pharmacotherapy are not clearly established, though there have been promising early studies of a number of agents.
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48

Hand, William R. Introduction to Perioperative Crisis Management. Edited by Matthew D. McEvoy and Cory M. Furse. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190226459.003.0086.

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Management of perioperative emergencies caused by toxins, whether consumed by a patient or iatrogenic, requires a rapid assessment of patient stability and unique inquiry into the historical and clinical context leading to the patient condition. Unlike many other crises in the perioperative period, toxin-related end-organ instability often has a specific therapeutic agent required for reversal and recovery. In this section, each perioperative crisis will be described according to the pathophysiologic derangements that a clinician will encounter in both physical exam and laboratory findings. This will be followed with recommendations concerning proper patient assess for diagnosis and the a description of recommended management steps to be undertaken.
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49

Franklin, Martin E., Diana Antinoro, Emily J. Ricketts, and Douglas W. Woods. Treatment of Tic Disorders and Trichotillomania. Edited by Gail Steketee. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195376210.013.0095.

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This chapter briefly describes tic disorders and trichotillomania (TTM) and reviews the pharmacotherapy and psychosocial treatment outcome literature for each of these conditions. In contrast to anxiety or depression, distorted or maladaptive cognitions do not appear to play a central role in the etiology or maintenance of tic disorders and TTM, and therefore cognitive therapy is not emphasized in the psychosocial treatments studied to date. Treatment protocols are best characterized as “behavioral,” although some include ancillary cognitive interventions. Behavioral treatments that include habit reversal training (HRT) appear to hold the greatest promise for each of these conditions, and these are described in some detail. Future directions in treatment research are suggested.
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Greger, Michael, and Gene Stone. How Not to Die Cookbook: 100+ Recipes to Help Prevent and Reverse Disease. Flatiron Books, 2017.

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