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1

The Mobius model: A guide for developming effecting relationships in groups, teams, and organizations. Minneapolis, MN: MMI Group, 2004.

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2

Beardon, Alan F. The geometry of discrete groups. 2nd ed. New York: Springer, 1995.

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3

The new ethnic mobs: The changing face of organized crime in America. New York: Free Press, 1996.

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4

Soltan, Othman Aboubaker. Efficiency improvements to the Groupe Special Mobile (GSM) digital mobile radio system. Birmingham: Aston University. Department of Electronic Engineering and Applied Physics, 1994.

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5

Penders, Anne-Françoise. Brancusi, la photographie, ou, L'atelier comme "groupe mobile". Bruxelles: La Lettre volée, 1995.

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6

Baumann, Pierre, and Chloé Bappel. Sillage Melville: Recherche en arts et monde mobile. Pessac: Presses universitaires de Bordeaux, 2020.

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7

Save the Children Fund Fiji. Save the children Fiji: Mobile Playgroup Project, 2002-2007 : impact assessement. Fiji]: Save the Children Fiji, 2008.

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8

Pinel, Alain. Une police de Vichy: Les groupes mobiles de réserve, 1941-1944. Paris: Harmattan, 2004.

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9

Daele, Stijn Van. Extending offender mobility: Investigating mobile offenders through the case study of 'itinerant crime groups'. Antwerpen: Maklu, 2012.

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10

Zukunft entwerfen: Architektonische Konzepte des GEAM (Groupe d'Études d'Architecture Mobile), 1958-1963. Zürich: Gta Verlag, ETH Zürich, Institut für Geschichte und Theorie der Architektur, 2017.

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11

Ruiz, Jean. Sept ans de guerre en Algérie au sein des groupes mobiles de sécurité. La Crèche [France]: Geste, 2007.

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12

Ruiz, Jean. Sept ans de guerre en Algérie: Au sein des groupes mobiles de sécurité. La Crèche: Geste, 2007.

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13

Ontario. Ministry of Citizenship and Culture. Arts Branch. How to Draw the Tourist: Getting Your Share of This Mobile Audience : Tips For Ontario's Arts Groups. S.l: s.n, 1985.

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14

FCC auction: The phase II 220 MHz service auction, nationwide, economic area, and economic area group licenses : bidder information package. [Washington, D.C.]: Federal Communications Commission, 1998.

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15

United States. Federal Communications Commission. FCC auction: The phase II 220 MHz service auction, nationwide, economic area, and economic area group licenses : bidder information package. [Washington, D.C.]: Federal Communications Commission, 1998.

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16

Laru, Jari. Scaffolding learning activities with collaborative scripts and mobile devices. Oulu: University of Oulu, 2012.

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17

Bail, Sylvain Le. Le GMR (Groupe mobile de réserve) du Périgord, 1941-1944: Les forces de l'ordre sous Vichy. Saint-Georges-de-Mon: Le Chêne vert, 2003.

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18

author, Ding Yongsheng 1967, ed. Ji qi ren ji he dai shu mo xing yu kong zhi. Beijing: Ke xue chu ban she, 2011.

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19

United States. Bureau of the Census. 1990 census of population and housing: Population and housing characteristics for census tracts and block numbering areas : Mobile, AL MSA. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics Administration, Bureau of the Census, 1993.

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20

HIV/AIDS : Prevention and Care among Mobile Groups in the Balkans (2001 Rome, Italy). HIV/AIDS: Prevention and Care among Mobile Groups in the Balkans : insights from representatives of governments, international organizations and non-governmental organizations. [Rome, Italy: International Organization for Migration, 2001.

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21

Hope, Kempe R. HIV/AIDS and the mobile population groups in Botswana: A study commissioned by the Community Health Services Division Ministry of Health Republic of Botswana. Botswana: Government Printer, Gaborone, 1999.

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22

Donahue, James C. Mobile guerrilla force: With the Special Forces in War Zone D. Annapolis, Md: Naval Institute Press, 1996.

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23

Donahue, James C. No greater love: A day with the Mobile Guerrilla Force in Vietnam. Canton, Ohio: Daring Books, 1988.

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24

Simpson, Bill. Spitfire dive-bombers versus the V2: Fighter Command's battle with Hitler's mobile missiles. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen & Sword Aviation, 2007.

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25

N, Simons Rainee, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., eds. The effects of ground plane and parasitic layer on linearly tapered slot antenna. [Washington, DC: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1997.

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26

Viombois. 3rd ed. Issy-les-Moulineaux: Muller, 2003.

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27

Hard to forget: An American with the Mobile Guerrilla Force in Vietnam. New York: Ivy Books, 1998.

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28

Redwood, Richard B. The Redwood family of Mobile: The record of a large family in a deep south community during the 19th century, with family group records. Mobile, Ala: Willowbrook Press, 1993.

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29

Ettore, Sottsass. Ettore Sottsass: Mobili e qualche arredamento = furniture and a few interiors. Milano: A. Mondadori, 1985.

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30

Ettore, Sottsass. Ettore Sottsass: Mobili e qualche arredamento = Furniture and a few interiors. Milano: Mondadori, 1985.

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31

E, Koenig Brett, and United States. Environmental Protection Agency. Transportation and Market Incentives Group, eds. Evaluation of modeling tools for assessing land use policies and strategies: Prepared for Transportation and Market Incentives Group, Office of Mobile Sources, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Ann Arbor, Michigan. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Air and Radiation, Office of Mobile Sources, 1997.

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32

Rosenbaum, Arlene S. Evaluation of modeling tools for assessing land use policies and strategies ; prepared for Transportation and Market Incentives Group, Office of Mobile Sources, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Ann Arbor, Michigan ; prepared by Arlene S. Rosenbaum, Brett E. Koenig. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Air and Radiation, Office of Mobile Sources, 1997.

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33

Indexes to seamen's protection certificate applications and proofs of citizenship: Ports of New Orleans, Louisiana 1808-1821, 1851-1857 ... additional ports of Mobile, Alabama 1819-1859 ... : record group 36, records of the Bureau of Customs, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C. Baltimore, Md: Clearfield, 1998.

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34

Blackjack-33: With special forces in the Viet Cong forbidden zone. New York: Ivy Books, 1999.

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35

Blackjack-34. New York: Ballantine Books, 2000.

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36

Gotman, Kélina. Mobiles, Mobs, and Monads. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190840419.003.0006.

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The emergence of crowd theory in nineteenth-century sociology provided a new language for thinking how unruly bodies gather together organically. Drawing on the first large-scale biohistories of the French Revolution, made possible through documents unveiled at the Archives Nationales, theories of crowds, revolutionary and disordered, animal, automatic and ecological, spawned a genealogy of thinking about the way individuals’ movements were rendered—it was thought—primitive in groups. From the ‘Jerks’ in Kentucky and Tennessee to episodes of falling, starting, ticking, and jumping in hospitals, factories and lumber camps, the ‘social body’ appeared to be teetering out of choreopolitical control. Bacchantic drunkenness, like childlike play, epitomized thoughtless imitation and epidemic enthusiasm according to social scientists and neurologists concerned with the political effects of social contagion. Rapidly proliferating automatic gesture provoked crowds, they wrote, to form and significantly to deform—to disorganize—the political, social, and economic spheres, revealing a demos in disarray.
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37

Sickler, Peter. Texas - Building Procedural Fluency-Grade 6-Mobius Education Group. Mobius Education Group, 2006.

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38

Stephens, Keri K. Meetings as a Site to Negotiate Mobile Control. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0005.

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When mobile devices entered organizational meetings, there was a flurry of responses that sometimes resulted in misunderstandings. Olivia is a manager who’s trying to adapt to her vice president’s strict rule of “no thumbs under the table.” But her direct boss keeps bugging her while she’s in other meetings. Cedric is a mid-level manager in a global advertising firm who is confident his constant BlackBerry use conveys how productive he is; but the president thinks mobile use in his meetings hinders listening. Four key findings emerge: (1) some managers establish meeting ground rules, while others are not so clear; (2) subordinates using their mobiles in meetings are often oblivious as to how they’re being judged; (3) people often multicommunicate in meetings to essentially be two places at once; and (4) concertive control puts a normative pressure on groups that practically forces them to agree to be always reachable.
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39

Ludwig, Kirk. Group Membership. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198789994.003.0011.

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Chapter 11 is concerned with the nature of the membership relation relevant to sorting agents under the concept of a mob or organization and the nature of groups organized under such relations. First, it develops a taxonomy of different sorts of groups, distinguishing natural groups, institutions or organizations, and mobs and crowds. Second, it provides an account of membership in institutions, the key idea of which is that membership is a matter of having a determinable status role characterized by the nature of the relevant institution. Third, it takes up a counting puzzle connected with the reductive view of organizations. If an organization at a time is nothing but its members, then two clubs with the same members are the same, but this seems counterintuitive. Finally, it gives an analysis of membership specifically in mobs and crowds.
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40

Ferdinand, Peter. 12. Civil Society, Interest Groups, and the Media. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780198704386.003.0013.

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This chapter focuses on the concept of civil society, along with interest groups and the media. It first provides a background on the evolution of civil society and interest groups before discussing corporatism. In particular, it examines the ways in which civil society responds to state actors and tries to manoeuvre them into cooperation. This is politics from below. The chapter proceeds by considering the notion of ‘infrapolitics’ and the emergence of a school of ‘subaltern’ studies. It also explores the role of the media in political life and the impact of new communication technologies such as the Internet and mobile phones on politics. Finally, it evaluates some of the challenges presented by new media to civil society.
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41

Stephens, Keri K. Negotiating Control. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.001.0001.

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In this book, the author shows how employees, organizations, and even friends and family are struggling to understand how the expected norms for mobile-communication connectedness function when people are working. Until the early 2000s workplaces provided most of the computers and portable devices that employees used to do their jobs and communicate with others. Now, people bring their own mobile devices to work, use them to circumvent official organizational channels, and create new norms for how communication occurs. Managers and organizations set policies, enforce rules, and create their own workarounds to navigate the ever-changing mobile-communication environment. This book draws on over two decades of research studies and fieldwork, consisting of 150 distinct interviews and focus groups, representing people in over 35 different types of jobs, to claim that people assume mobile communication is a uniform practice. Instead, the book reveals underlying—often hidden—issues of control and power that shape how people are permitted and expected to use mobiles to communicate while working. The stories and extended examples reveal a wide-ranging account of how these portable tools are used across work environments today. The book develops a grounded theory describing the ongoing negotiation for control when people use their personally owned devices while working. These lifelines integrate information, communication, and data, and they connect people in unexpected and often conflicting ways.
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42

Siegel, Dina. Mobile Banditry: East and Central European Itinerant Criminal Groups in the Netherlands. Eleven International Publishing, 2014.

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43

Stephens, Keri K. Trust, Understanding, and Mobile Control in Manual Work. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0006.

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As mobile devices became more affordable, people at all job levels started bringing their personal devices to work. All of a sudden, people saw workers whose jobs involved manual labor pull out their mobiles and tap away. There was an assumption that they were often cyberslacking—wasting work time on non-work tasks. This chapter introduces a group of janitors who were banned from using their personal devices at work. But their supervisors were stuck in an awkward place: sandwiched between needing to communicate face-to-face with their subordinates and being expected to be constantly reachable through multiple devices because that’s how their own managers communicated. The ban reinforced existing power structures; there were issues of trust, language barriers, computer literacy, and inconsistent enforcement of rules. This ban actually harmed productivity, and the findings suggest that these manual workers can use mobile devices productively: they still need access to on-the-job information.
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44

Çitlak, Banu, Megan Lueneburg, Meglena Zlatkova, and Sebastian Kurtenbach. New Diversity of Family Life in Europe: Mobile Ethnic Groups and Flexible Boundaries. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, 2017.

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45

Ltd, ICON Group. GROUPE SANI MOBILE INC: Labor Productivity Benchmarks and International Gap Analysis (Labor Productivity Series). 2nd ed. Icon Group International, Inc., 2000.

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46

Hoffman, Julia E., Eric Kuhn, Jason E. Owen, and Josef I. Ruzek. Mobile Apps to Improve Outreach, Engagement, Self-Management, and Treatment for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190205959.003.0015.

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Within the past decade, the emergence and pervasiveness of mobile technology across all socioeconomic groups in most parts of the world has enabled myriad opportunities to engage trauma survivors in novel approaches to treatment, self-management, and symptom monitoring. While the World Wide Web has continued its explosive growth, the availability of mobile phones has kept pace. These sophisticated devices are always on and always accessible, enabling previously unheard-of opportunities for patient engagement, connection with providers and systems, objective measures of functioning and change, and innovative enhancements to evidence-based treatment tools. The potential for mobile technology to ease delivery of medical care has led to the release of hundreds of thousands of software and hardware applications (“apps”). The National Center for PTSD has been at the forefront of app development for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), including PTSD Coach. Various publicly available, free apps are described.
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47

Friesen, Max. Pan-Arctic Population Movements. Edited by Max Friesen and Owen Mason. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199766956.013.40.

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This chapter provides description and interpretation of the two major, well-documented episodes of Arctic-wide migrations. The Paleo-Inuit (also called Paleoeskimo or Arctic Small Tool tradition) migration began around 3,200 B.C., with penetration of the central Arctic by highly mobile, small-scale hunter-gatherer groups. By around 2,500 B.C., the entire eastern Arctic had been peopled by cultures known as Pre-Dorset, Saqqaq, and Independence I. The Thule Inuit migration began around A.D. 1200, when complex maritime-oriented groups from the western Arctic initiated an extremely rapid population movement, spanning the North American Arctic within a generation. The chapter considers the timing and nature of each migration episode, as well as the motivating factors which have been proposed for them, including climate change, social or economic hardship, and acquisition of specific resources such as bowhead whales or metal.
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48

Fernandes, Sujatha. Sticking to the Script. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190618049.003.0005.

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This chapter looks at how storytelling was used by mainstream immigrant rights groups to produce an aspiring class of upwardly mobile and self-reliant undocumented youth while defusing broader migrant rights activism. In the campaign for legalization through a DREAM Act, the undocumented students known as Dreamers told their stories to the legislature and the media. The students were given scripts to follow that emphasized their achievements, assimilation into American society, and rejection of their home countries. In the lead-up to the 2008 national election and the subsequent push for Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CIR), groups of young people were mobilized in mass storytelling trainings across the country to support the electoral and legislative agenda of mainstream organizations. Eventually, many young people rebelled against this orchestration and sought to take control over their own representations. Some even began to move away from storytelling as a mode of political engagement altogether.
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49

Cooley, Will. Immigration, Ethnicity, Race, and Organized Crime. Edited by Ronald H. Bayor. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199766031.013.019.

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How immigration and ethnicity shaped delinquent youth groups (gangs) and adult organized crime syndicates (mobs) is examined. Ethnicity has played a key role in these organizations. Gangs and mobs used ethnic ties as an organizing principle to foster trust in their illicit activities. Scholars have usually applied the theory of ethnic succession to account for the changes in supremacy over the informal economy. Yet scholars have attached too much importance to the ethnic succession theory. To fully understand the underworld, scholars need to recognize interethnic cooperation, the persistence of class, and the rewards of whiteness.
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50

Hamamoto, Takashi. Ōbei shakai no shūdan mōsō to Karuto Shōkōgun: Shōnen Jūjigun, Sennen Ōkoku, majogari, KKK, jinshu shugi no seisei to rensa. 2015.

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