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1

ill, Garvin Elaine, ed. Why did Nehemiah work so hard? Boston: Pauline Books & Media, 1996.

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2

Krueger, Lisa. Does outsourcing harm America? Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2010.

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Krueger, Lisa. Does outsourcing harm America? Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2010.

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4

Jackson, Andrew. From leaps of faith to hard landings: Fifteen years of "free trade". Ottawa: Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, 2003.

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5

ill, Westcott Nadine Bernard, ed. Miss Mary Mack: A hand-clapping rhyme. Boston: Little, Brown, 1998.

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6

For the hard ones: A lesbian phenomenology. San Diego, CA: Calaca Press, 2002.

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7

The last hand. New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Minotaur, 2002.

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8

Wright, Eric. The last hand. Toronto: Dundurn Group, 2001.

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9

Wright, Eric. The last hand. New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2002.

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10

Chung, Simone Shu-Yeng, and Mike Douglass, eds. The Hard State, Soft City of Singapore. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463729505.

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With Singapore serving as the subject of exploration, The Hard State, Soft City of Singapore explores the purview of imaginative representations of the city. Alongside the physical structures and associated practices that make up our lived environment, and conceptualized space engineered into material form by bureaucrats, experts and commercial interests, a perceptual layer of space is conjured out of people’s everyday life experiences. While such imaginative projections may not be as tangible as its functional designations, they are nonetheless equally vital and palpable. The richness of its inhabitants’ memories, aspirations and meaningful interpretations challenges the reduction of Singapore as a Generic City. Taking the imaginative field as the point of departure, the forms and modes of intellectual and creative articulations of Singapore’s urban condition probe the resilience of cities and the people who reside in them, through the images they convey or evoke as a means for collective expressions of human agency in placemaking.
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11

Wilson, William W. Incentive contracts to meet functional characteristics in wheat purchasing. Fargo, ND: Dept. of Agribusiness and Applied Economics, Agricultural Experiment Station, North Dakota State University, 2004.

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12

Green, Lowell. It's hard to say goodbye: It's almost over-- God, I've loved it! [Carp, ON]: Creative Bound International, 2007.

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13

Goodman, Eric K. Child of my right hand: A novel. Naperville, Ill: Sourcebooks Landmark, 2004.

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14

National Portage Conference (12th 1992 Torquay, England). Hand in hand with Portage: South West Region National Portage Conference1992, proceedings, Barton Hall, Torbay, 30 Oct - 1 Nov 1992. [Yeovil]: National Portage Association, 1993.

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15

Wright, Eric. A fine Italian hand. New York: C. Scribner's Sons, 1994.

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16

National Portage Conference (12th 1992 Torquay). Hand in hand with Portage: Proceedings of the South West Region National Portage Conference, Barton Hall, Torbay, 30 Oct-1 Nov 1992. [s.l.]: National Portage Association, 1992.

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17

Judge, Edward H. A hard and bitter peace: A global history of the cold war. Upper Saddle River, N.J: Prentice Hall, 1996.

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18

The dead hand: Reagan, Gorbachev and the untold story of the Cold War arms race. London: Icon Books, 2011.

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19

Hoffman, David E. The dead hand: The untold story of the Cold War arms race and its dangerous legacy. New York: Anchor Books, 2010.

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20

Hoffman, David E. The dead hand: The untold story of the Cold War arms race and its dangerous legacy. New York: Doubleday, 2009.

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21

ke-43, Panitya Hari ABRI, ed. Hari ABRI, 5 Okt. 1988. Jakarta: Panitya Hari ABRI ke-43, 1988.

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22

Aronoff, Yael S. Political Psychology of Israeli Prime Ministers: When Hard-Liners Opt for Peace. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2014.

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23

Political Psychology of Israeli Prime Ministers: When Hard-Liners Opt for Peace. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2014.

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24

The Political Psychology of Israeli Prime Ministers: When Hard-Liners Opt For Peace. Cambridge University Press, 2014.

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25

Lisa, Frohnapfel-Krueger, ed. Does outsourcing harm America? Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2010.

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26

Does outsourcing harm America? Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2010.

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27

Nadine Bernard Westcott (Illustrator) (Illustrator), ed. Miss Mary Mack: A Hand-Clapping Rhyme. Little, Brown Young Readers, 2003.

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28

Gent, Stephen E., and Mark J. C. Crescenzi. Market Power Politics. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197529805.001.0001.

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This book explores how market power competition between states can create disruptions in the global political economy and potentially lead to territorial aggression and war. When a state’s firms have the ability to set prices in a key commodity market like oil or natural gas, state leaders can benefit from increased revenue, stability, and political leverage. Given these potential benefits, states may be motivated to expand their territorial reach in order to gain or maintain such market power. This market power motivation can sometimes lead to war. However, when states are economically interdependent, they may be constrained from using force to achieve their market power goals. This can open up an opportunity for institutional settlements. However, in some cases, institutional rules and procedures can preclude states from reaching a settlement in line with their market power ambitions. When this happens, states may opt for strategic delay and try to gradually accumulate market power over time through salami tactics. To explore how these dynamics play out empirically, the authors examine three cases of market power competition in hard commodity markets: Iraq’s invasion and occupation of Kuwait to seize market power in the oil export market, Russia’s territorial encroachment into Georgia and Ukraine to preserve and expand its market power in the natural gas market, and China’s ongoing use of strategic delay and gray zone tactics in the South and East China Seas to maintain its dominant position in the global market for rare earth elements.
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29

Shippey, Tom. Hard Reading. Liverpool University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781781382615.001.0001.

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This book makes an argument for the intellectual ambition and intellectual achievement of science fiction, a genre consistently undervalued by professional literary critics. It is pointed out repeatedly how much the genre owes to developments in anthropology, history, and other “soft sciences”; how the authority of the hard sciences is both asserted and challenged; and how the authority of ancient myths and modern values are likewise interrogated, with widely variant results. Science fiction, it is argued, has been a collective “thinking machine” for authors and readers alike, often (and especially in its early years) people without academic experience or intellectual support. It has been (but increasingly less so) a genre for autodidacts. Reading and writing it is nevertheless an education in itself, as the author shows with repeated personal prefaces both to the book as a whole and to each chapter. Science fiction, finally, has its own rhetoric, seen in neologisms, paratextual devices, anachronisms, breaches of stylistic decorum, and the manipulation of degraded information, techniques little understood by and often incomprehensible to critics used only to the conventions of mainstream literature. All these features contribute to the description of science fiction as hard reading, but correspondingly rewarding reading. They have made science fiction the most characteristic literary genre of the twentieth and now the twenty-first centuries.
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30

Zhang, Lu. Whose Hard Times? University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038174.003.0011.

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This chapter carries out an in-depth analysis of the transformation of China's automobile industry and its labor force over the past two decades, with particular attention on how shop-floor, national, and global processes interact in complex ways to produce the specific industrial relations and dynamics of labor unrest in the Chinese automobile industry. It argues that the massive foreign investment in China's auto sector through joint ventures and the increased scale and concentration of automobile production have created and strengthened a new generation of autoworkers with growing workplace bargaining power and grievances. However, the acute contradictory pressures of simultaneously pursuing profitability and maintaining legitimacy with labor have driven large state-owned automakers and Sino-foreign joint ventures to follow a policy of labor force dualism, drawing boundaries between formal and temporary workers. While formal workers enjoy high wages, generous benefits, and relatively secure employment, temporary workers suffer comparatively low wages, unsecure employment, and heavier and dirtier job assignments. Temporary and other low-wage autoworkers have also become the main source of militancy in the auto industry.
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31

Denham, Joyce. The Hard to Swallow Tale of Jonah and the Whale (Tales from the Bible). Lion Pub, 2001.

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32

Denham, Joyce. The Hard to Swallow Tale of Jonah and the Whale (Tales from the Bible). Lion Children's Books, 2001.

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33

Dunbar, Katherine Read. Does Outsourcing Harm America? (At Issue Series). Greenhaven Press, 2006.

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34

Does Outsourcing Harm America? (At Issue Series). Greenhaven Press, 2006.

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35

Webb, Joan C. The Relief of Imperfection: For Women Who Try Too Hard to Make It All Just Right. Regal Books, 2008.

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36

Coolen, A. C. C., A. Annibale, and E. S. Roberts. Graphs with hard constraints: further applications and extensions. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198709893.003.0007.

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This chapter looks at further topics pertaining to the effective use of Markov Chain Monte Carlo to sample from hard- and soft-constrained exponential random graph models. The chapter considers the question of how moves can be sampled efficiently without introducing unintended bias. It is shown mathematically and numerically that apparently very similar methods of picking out moves can give rise to significant differences in the average topology of the networks generated by the MCMC process. The general discussion in complemented with pseudocode in the relevant section of the Algorithms chapter, which explicitly sets out some accurate and practical move sampling approaches. The chapter also describes how the MCMC equilibrium probabilities can be purposely deformed to, for example, target desired correlations between degrees of connected nodes. The mathematical exposition is complemented with graphs showing the results of numerical simulations.
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37

1986-, Newman Alex, ed. All out: A father and son confront the hard truths that made them better men. 2015.

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38

Grand Opera House (London, Ont.), ed. Grand Opera House, London, Ont.: Friday night and Saturday matinee, Oct. 28th and 29th, 1892 : programme, sensational comedy-drama The hand of fate! in five acts, by Miron Leffingwell .. [London, Ont.?: s.n., 1986.

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39

Wright, Eric. The Last Hand (Castle Street Mysteries). Castle Street Mysteries, 2001.

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40

Hutchinson, G. O. Taking Fratricide Too Hard (Timoleon 5–6). Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198821717.003.0005.

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This chapter provides a contrast: it looks at a longer passage not dense in rhythm to bring out the nature of the dense passages which are the main concern of the book. This passage itself varies in how packed or loose the rhythms are: there is greater passing density at philosophical or heightened moments. The mobility of Plutarch’s style can be clearly seen. Timoleon is here at a contrasting position to that seen in the previous chapter: he is reacting to his involvement in the killing of his tyrannical brother with gloom and an evasion of public life. Plutarch expatiates philosophically. This and the previous passage together illustrate various kinds of range in Plutarch’s Lives, including complexity of depiction and depth of time.
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41

The Dead Hand. New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2009.

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42

Wright, Eric. The Last Hand: An Inspector Charlie Salter Mystery. Worldwide, 2006.

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43

Offner, Amy C. Sorting Out the Mixed Economy. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691190938.001.0001.

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In the years after 1945, a flood of U.S. advisors swept into Latin America with dreams of building a new economic order and lifting the Third World out of poverty. These businessmen, economists, community workers, and architects went south with the gospel of the New Deal on their lips, but Latin American realities soon revealed unexpected possibilities within the New Deal itself. In Colombia, Latin Americans and U.S. advisors ended up decentralizing the state, privatizing public functions, and launching austere social welfare programs. By the 1960s, they had remade the country's housing projects, river valleys, and universities. They had also generated new lessons for the United States itself. When the Johnson administration launched the War on Poverty, U.S. social movements, business associations, and government agencies all promised to repatriate the lessons of development, and they did so by multiplying the uses of austerity and for-profit contracting within their own welfare state. A decade later, ascendant right-wing movements seeking to dismantle the midcentury state did not need to reach for entirely new ideas: they redeployed policies already at hand. This book brings readers to Colombia and back, showing the entanglement of American societies and the contradictory promises of midcentury statebuilding. The untold story of how the road from the New Deal to the Great Society ran through Latin America, the book also offers a surprising new account of the origins of neoliberalism.
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44

Boonin, David. Freedom and the (Posthumous) Harm Principle. Edited by David Schmidtz and Carmen E. Pavel. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199989423.013.13.

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The Harm Principle maintains that the only legitimate reason for limiting a person’s freedom is to prevent that person from harming others. The Posthumous Harm Thesis maintains that it is possible for an act to harm a person even if the act takes place after the person is dead. If this is true, then acts that might otherwise appear to be harmless may in fact prove to harm someone, and acts that might otherwise appear to be consistent with the Harm Principle might turn out to violate it. One must therefore consider whether posthumous harm is possible. This chapter sets out a three-premise argument in defense of the Posthumous Harm Thesis, considers some of the objections that have been raised against them, and examines ways to overcome these objections. Its goal is to show that the argument for the Posthumous Harm Thesis is considerably more robust than is often thought.
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45

Ullmann-Margalit, Edna. Invisible-Hand Explanations. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198802433.003.0008.

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Invisible-hand explanations suggest that many social practices are a product of human action, but not human design. In coming to terms with such explanations, it is essential to distinguish between explanations of the emergence of practices and explanations of the persistence of practices. The kind of invisible-hand explanation that accounts for the emergence of practices might turn out to be altogether different from the kind that accounts for their persistence. The emergence of practices is often best explained by aggregating explanations: Diverse and dispersed action by numerous people might produce some kind of pattern, even if they did not foresee it or intend to bring it about. By contrast, practices often persist because of evolutionary explanations. They survive some sort of competition. Survival value may have nothing to do with the emergence of a practice in the first place.
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46

Bronstein, Michaela. Out of Context. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190655396.001.0001.

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How do novels travel through time? How might they endure in a changing world in order to reach the unknowable readers of the future? Modernist writers were obsessed with questions like these, and eager for their books to reach out to people, times, and cultures beyond their own. In recent years, scholars of modernism have focused on pinning them down: putting these books in their context and these authors in their place. We do so because we fear that any ambition to reach the future will make literature disengaged, irresponsible, and apolitical. We worry that literature cannot escape its own moment without also evading the hard truths of history itself. This book argues instead that literature can travel through time: not by transcending history, but by adapting to historical change. Each chapter pairs a modernist author with a reader who heard these old novels calling his or her name. In each case, these future readers are also novelists—who read with an eye to form and craft, and who put what they see to new use in their own novels. Their rewritings of the past treat the literary canon not as an object of antagonistic critique, but as a set of resources and tools to move new generations of readers.
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47

Cohen, Jeffrey A., Justin J. Mowchun, Victoria H. Lawson, and Nathaniel M. Robbins. A 54-Year-Old Male with Right-Hand Weakness. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190491901.003.0002.

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Early in its course, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is mistaken for a number of other neuromuscular problems, including spinal disease, multifocal motor neuropathy, and even carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) when the weakness is distal and focal. In our patient CTS or cervical spine disease was considered. MRI scan of the appropriate spinal level is important to rule out spinal disease. Nerve conduction studies (NCS) and electromyography (EMG) help to exclude other possibilities and point to the diagnosis of ALS. Later in the clinical course, the clinical picture is pathognomonic with upper and lower motor neuron signs. The differential diagnosis of focal weakness is discussed, as is recognition of the more typical ALS clinical syndrome and familial ALS. NCS and EMG findings in ALS are discussed.
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48

Smiley, Will. Those Left Out. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198785415.003.0009.

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As the Ottoman law of captivity expanded to include other sovereign states at the close of the eighteenth century, the rules also left out many of the Porte’s enemies. This chapter argues that rebels, pirates, and certain types of slaves trafficked into the Ottoman Empire remained unprotected by either the prisoner-of-war system, the Law of Release, or both. Ottoman subjects, or those who could claim no major empire’s subjecthood, had far fewer protections than those who were Russian, Austrian, Iranian, British, or French subjects. This distinction became systematic as the Ottoman state dealt with corsairs, and then rebellious Serbian and Greek populations. Throughout, slaves sold into the empire (such as Circassians and Africans) and some of those forcibly abducted (such as Georgians) also remained outside the prisoner-of-war system and the Law of Release.
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49

Hard and Bitter Peace: A Global History of the Cold War. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, 2017.

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50

Judge, Edward H., and John W. Langdon. Hard and Bitter Peace: A Global History of the Cold War. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, 2017.

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