Books on the topic 'Modes of reproduction'

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1

Macfarlane, Alan. Marriage and love in England: Modes of reproduction 1300-1840. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1986.

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2

Marriage and love in England: Modes of reproduction, 1300-1840. Oxford, UK: B. Blackwell, 1986.

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3

Marriage and love in England 1300-1840: Modes of reproduction 1300-1840. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1987.

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4

Vuorela, Ulla. The women's question and the modes of human reproduction: An analysis of a Tanzanian village. Uppsala, Sweden: Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, 1987.

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5

Association internationale des démographes de langue française., ed. Les modes de régulation de la reproduction humaine: Incidences sur la fécondité : colloque international de Delphes, 6-10 octobre 1992. [Paris]: Presses universitaires de France, 1994.

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6

Constantinescu, Gheorghe, and Heide Schatten, eds. Animal Models and Human Reproduction. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118881286.

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7

Yulinov, Valeriy, Natal'ya Patrusheva, and Boris Kochurov. Demographics. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1020561.

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The textbook covers the main sections of the course "Demography": the object, subject and methods of demography, connection with other sciences; sources of data on the population; the main types and factors of population movement, modes of natural reproduction of the population; migration and reproduction of the population; demographic, ethnic and religious structure of the population; demographic policy of the state. Meets the requirements of the federal state educational standards of higher education of the latest generation. For students of higher educational institutions studying under the bachelor's degree programs 38.03.04 and master's degree programs 38.04.04 in the direction of "State and Municipal Management", as well as for all those interested in demographic problems and their solution.
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8

Mueller, Werner A., Monika Hassel, and Maura Grealy. Development and Reproduction in Humans and Animal Model Species. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-43784-1.

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9

Carlson, John D. A model of the productivity of the northern pintail. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service, 1993.

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10

Letty, Éric. Résistance au Meilleur des mondes: Essai. Paris: Pierre-Guillaume de Roux, 2015.

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11

Dulepov, V. I. Matematicheskoe modelirovanie vosproizvodstva tikhookeanskikh lososeĭ. Vladivostok: Dalʹnauka, 1999.

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12

International Theriological Congress (8th 2001 Sun City, South Africa). Large mammals as neuroendocrine models: Proceedings of a symposium held at the 8th International Theriological Congress, Sun City, South Africa, August 2001 and other invited contributions. Cambridge: Society for Reproduction and Fertility, 2002.

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13

Sueeprasan, Suchitra. Evaluation of colour appearance models and daylight illuminant simulators to provide predictable cross-media colour reproduction. [Derby: University of Derby], 2002.

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14

Bennett, Jenny. Sailing into the past: Learning from replica ships. Annapolis, Md: Naval Institute Press, 2009.

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15

Un schéma de reproduction pour l'économie des Etats-Unis, 1948-1980: Tentative de modélisation et de quantification. Berne: P. Lang, 1993.

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16

B, Banza-Nsungu Antoine, ed. The changing patterns of the reproductive model of the Akan: (Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana). Yaoundé, Cameroun: Institut de formation et de recherche démographiques, 2001.

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17

Joyce, Theodore J. State reproductive policies and adolescent pregnancy resolution: The case of parental involvement laws. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1995.

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18

Liambila, Wilson N. Strengthening the delivery of comprehensive reproductive health services through the community midwifery model in Kenya. Nairobi, Kenya: APHIA II OR Project in Kenya, Population Council, 2012.

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19

Musées royaux d'art et d'histoire (Belgium). Les moulages des Musées royaux d'art et d'histoire: Histoire de la collection & de l'atelier des reproductions en plâtre. Bruxelles: Musées royaux d'art et d'histoire, 2008.

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20

Cavaciocchi, Simonetta, ed. Le interazioni fra economia e ambiente biologico nell'Europa preindustriale secc. XIII-XVIII. Economic and biological interactions in pre-industrial Europe from the 13th to the 18th centuries. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-8453-596-2.

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Pests, parasites and pathogenic agents have exerted a notable influence on the process of economic development of pre-industrial Europe, in view of their influence on the health, longevity and reproduction of human beings, plants and animals. On each occasion man has reacted to biological uncertainty with responses that were public or private, formal or informal and differed in both efficacy and cost. Success has always been partial, and dependent on experience, knowledge and the investment of economic resources. These reciprocal influences have never been allocated an appropriate or convincing place in the institutional model or those of Smith, Malthus, Ricardo or Marx, typically exploited to describe and explain the flux and reflux of the economic development of pre-industrial Europe. In these proceedings of Study Week promoted by the Fondazione Datini, the leading experts in the sector have undertaken to analyse, exemplify and discuss the precise nature of the complex interactions between economic and biological processes and agents. Adopying a stimulating, innovative and interdisciplinary approach, they appraise the degree to which such processes acted in reciprocal independence, whether there was a significant co-evolution and what prospects there are for developing explanatory models that better grasp the essentially bilateral nature of such interactions.
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21

Das, N. P. Systematic screening to meet unmet need by integrating reproductive health services: An operations research model to maximise the service utilisation : final report. Baroda: Population Research Centre, Faculty of Science, M.S. University of Baroda, 2005.

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22

Csanádi, Mária. Self-consuming evolutions: A model on the structure, self-reproduction, self-destruction and transformation of party-state systems tested in Romania, Hungary and China. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 2006.

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23

Ferguson, Dennis E. Predicting regeneration in the grand fir-cedar-hemlock ecosystem of the northern Rocky Mountains. Washington, D.C: Society of American Foresters, 1986.

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24

1947-, Merrill-Oldham Jan, Smith Merrily A, American Library Association. Resources and Technical Services Division., and Library of Congress. National Preservation Program Office., eds. The Library preservation program: Models, priorities, possibilities : proceedings of a conference, April 29, 1983, Washington, D.C. Chicago: ALA, 1985.

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25

Macfarlane, Alan. Marriage and Love in England: Modes of Reproduction 1300-1840. Blackwell Pub, 1987.

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26

K, Martens, ed. Sex and parthenogenesis: Evolutionary ecology of reproductive modes in non-marine ostracods. Leiden: Backhuys Publishers, 1998.

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27

Schatten, Heide, and Gheorghe M. Constantinescu. Animal Models and Human Reproduction. Wiley & Sons, Limited, John, 2017.

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28

Animal Models and Human Reproduction. Wiley-Blackwell, 2017.

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29

Miller, Ruth A. The Biopolitics of Embryos and Alphabets. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190638351.001.0001.

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The two subjects of this book are biopolitics (unfashionable since the late 1990s) and posthumanism (falling out of fashion since the mid-2000s). Taking the inauspicious intersection of these two passé scholarly analytic modes as its starting point, the book makes a case for their value, nonetheless, in explaining the increasing cen¬trality of nostalgia to democratic politics. Nostalgia, far from being a too human evasion of political responsibility, appears here, on the contrary, as the product of a slow-motion collision between nonhuman biopolitical reproduction and nonhu¬man biopolitical thought. As a reproductive thought process, nostalgia is thus both central to ongoing democratic engagement and irrelevant to the human experience. Embedded in a wide-ranging reading of feminist theories of cognition, reproduction, and the posthuman as well as literary and historical studies of nostalgia as an illness, an experience, and a problem for engaged politics, and drawing together two seem¬ingly unrelated case studies of nostalgic, thoughtful, reproductive activity—first, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century writing in French on embryonic material and, second, nineteenth- and twentieth-century writing in Turkish on Alphabet reform—the book demonstrates the unexpected reach of a new, if nostalgic, reproductive his¬tory and politics of the nonhuman.
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30

F, Weinbauer Gerhard, Korte Rainhart, and Primate Symposium (11th : 1997), eds. Reproduction in nonhuman primates: A model system for human reproductive physiology and toxicology. Mu nster [Germany]: Waxmann, 1999.

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31

Sheldon, Rebekah. Life. University of Minnesota Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5749/minnesota/9780816689873.003.0003.

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The second chapter continues with the equation of the child in relation to the future, taking up the centrality of reproduction to any ethics premised on human survival. Through a reading of Joanna Russ’s 1977 novel We Who Are About To, it considers narrative structures that refuse generational survival and intergenerational rescue, as rescue requires everything to hold its shape, to remain as it is, long enough to be rescued. Therefore, it isn’t that the world is acausal but that causality is richer and stranger than rescue and survival narratives can imagine. Ideologies of reproduction are one of the modes by which we attempt to manage biological, chemical, and ontological affectivities.
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32

Schatten, Heide, and Gheorghe M. Constantinescu. Animal Models and Human Reproduction. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2017.

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33

Pathak, K. B. Stochastic Models of Human Reproduction. Himalaya Publishing House, 1993.

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34

Schatten, Heide, and Gheorghe M. Constantinescu. Animal Models and Human Reproduction. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2017.

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35

Peck, Jamie. Pluralizing Labour Geography. Edited by Gordon L. Clark, Maryann P. Feldman, Meric S. Gertler, and Dariusz Wójcik. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198755609.013.5.

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The chapter presents a sympathetic overview of labour geography in its various and evolving forms. This has mapped the shifting politics of production, together with old and new forms of labour organization; it has problematized the workplace, as a site of struggle and as an arena for the performance of social identities; it has tracked the restructuring of labour markets, as spaces of socio-institutional stress and regulatory transformation; and it has deployed labour as a diagnostic for understanding different (local) varieties of capitalism, economies of care and reproduction, and alternative modes of socio-economic organization. The field has consequently been shaped by an accumulating array of concerns with (industrial) restructuring, (labour) regulation, (union) reorganization, and (social) reproduction.
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36

Gallo, Ester. Family Histories, Reproduction, and Migration. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199469307.003.0007.

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Chapter six discusses how different family models— joint, nuclear, transnational, among others—are linked to class mobility among Nambudiri migrant families. The question of the relation between family size, sterilization and citizenship is analysed to show how sticking to the ‘one-child’ model is made meaningful by referring to a wider colonial history of family reproduction and creates dilemmas in the present. The chapter discusses how histories of procreation, childbirth, and care are recalled to illustrate the progressive move from a sterile community to a responsible community. While the sterile community describes a colonial past in which few Nambudiri children were born or accepted due to orthodox kinship norms, the responsible community accepts the sacrifice represented by sterilization in order to achieve models of modern motherhood and fatherhood. Changing family sizes, if combined with generational forms of migration, also produces anxieties among middle-class families on elderly and children care.
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37

Moses, Matthew S., and Gregory S. Chirikjian. Reproduction. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199674923.003.0007.

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Computing pioneer and polymath John von Neumann introduced the concept of a Universal Constructor as part of his effort to develop a mathematical theory describing living organisms. A Universal Constructor is a kinematic machine able to manipulate and assemble primitive building blocks. Von Neumann showed how this hypothetical constructor, being itself composed of the same primitive blocks, could self-reproduce and evolve. Remarkably, although this model system pre-dates the discovery of the genetic code, it applies to cell molecular biology as well as man-made machines. This chapter describes some key laboratory demonstrations related to universal construction and machine self-reproduction, and discusses parallels between reproduction processes in machines and biological cells.
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38

A.B.T.M. van Schaik. Reproduction and fixed capital. Springer, 2012.

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39

Avilez, GerShun. The Demands on Reproduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040122.003.0004.

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This chapter tracks how artists investigate the discourse of reproduction not simply to explore dual meanings, but rather to consider how the politicized concept of reproduction functions as a contested means for conveying gender identity. In her painted quilt sequence The Slave Rape Series, Faith Ringgold uses reproduction to establish a visual interrogation of Black gender identity and to probe the implications of the commitment to reproductive paradigms. Her paintings of the pregnant body create the opportunity to recast the images circulating in political discourse, which favor restrictive conceptions of gender expression, especially in regard to femininity. On the other hand, Toni Morrison's novel Paradise (1997) moves the questioning of reproduction to the realm of narrative and enhances the exploration of masculinity. Meanwhile, Spike Lee's feature film She Hate Me (2004) evokes nationalist strategies by offering an exploration of reproduction as a viable mechanism for resolving social anxieties about gender identity and for rearticulating Black social agency.
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40

Morton, Jonathan. The Art itself is Nature. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198816669.003.0003.

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The chapter outlines different models of nature in medieval Aristotelian and Platonic philosophy in order to show how the Rose plays them against each other to articulate its own model of the complex relationship between art and nature. For the Rose there is no getting at nature except by means of art, as suggested by the self-conscious artificiality of the figure of Nature, taken from the allegories of twelfth-century Neoplatonism. Art, a broad category that encompasses all human activity, is insufficient in describing nature’s truths and is potentially sophistic in its lies. However, questions of nature are always questions of art on whose help humans depend to understand and to represent to themselves a nature that can never be fully known. Finally, the model of reproductive nature is used to legitimate the reproduction of texts and the continuation of arts that is literary production.
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41

McCance, Dawne. The Reproduction of Life Death. Fordham University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823283910.001.0001.

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During the 1975–76 academic year, Jacques Derrida delivered a seminar, La vie la mort, at the Paris ENS. Based on archival translations of this as-yet untapped seminar, McCance’s The Reproduction of Life Death offers an unprecedented study of Derrida’s engagement with molecular biology and genetics, particularly François Jacob’s interpretation of DNA reproduction in his 1970 book La Logique du vivant (The Logic of the Living). Structured on an itinerary of “three rings,” each departing from and coming back to Nietzsche, Derrida’s seminar ties Jacob’s logocentric account of reproduction to the reproductive program of teaching that characterizes the academic institution, challenging this mode of teaching as auto-reproduction along with the concept of academic freedom on which it is based. McCance’s The Reproduction of Life Death makes another decisive contribution in bringing together Derrida’s critique of Jacob’s theory of auto-reproduction with his reading of reproductivity, the tendency to repeat-reproduce, that is theorized and enacted in Freud’s “speculative” Beyond the Pleasure Principle. The book includes Derrida’s analyses of life death in relation to autobiography and the signature. The book will be of interest to all theorists and disciplines concerned with the question of life.
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42

Barreto, Cristiana. Figurine Traditions from the Amazon. Edited by Timothy Insoll. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199675616.013.020.

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Stone and ceramic figurines occurred in many pre-Columbian cultures of Amazonia but only appear as recurrent, traditional objects late in the cultural history of the region, primarily in the large settlements which flourished along the Lower Amazon and its estuaries. Marajoara and Santarém ceramics include an array of figurines depicting humans and animals, in languages emphasizing body transformation and reproduction, and, sometimes, decapitation. Some also performed as rattles, or maracas, an instrument traditionally related to shamanic power. Stone figurines from the Lower Amazon present similar modes of body representation and seem to be part of the drug paraphernalia used in shamanic rituals. Rather than being a marker for the appearance of more complex, agrarian societies, Amazonian figurines seem to be related to the intensification of deeply rooted shamanic practices. This chapter reviews the context and repertoires of figurine traditions within the different models proposed in Amazonian archaeology for pre-Columbian societies.
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43

Large Mammals As Neuroendocrine Models (Supplement to Reproduction). Portland Pr, 2002.

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44

Hassel, Monika, Werner A. Mueller, and Maura Grealy. Development and Reproduction in Humans and Animal Model Species. Springer, 2015.

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45

Hassel, Monika, Werner A. Mueller, and Maura Grealy. Development and Reproduction in Humans and Animal Model Species. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 2015.

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46

Hassel, Monika, Werner A. Mueller, and Maura Grealy. Development and Reproduction in Humans and Animal Model Species. Springer, 2015.

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47

Young, Craig M., Shawn M. Arellano, Jean-François Hamel, and Annie Mercier, eds. Ecology and Evolution of Larval Dispersal in the Deep Sea. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198786962.003.0016.

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The importance of larval dispersal in the deep ocean is generally acknowledged in studies of genetic connectivity, conservation, and population ecology, but our understanding of the underlying reproductive, developmental, and oceanographic processes remains rudimentary. Recent efforts at modeling deep-sea dispersal have generally taken the form of sensitivity analyses, because biological parameters for the models are lacking. In this review, what is known about the evolution of biological parameters that may influence dispersal times, depth distributions, and trajectories, including modes of development, vertical ontogenetic migration, are examined, as well as the ecological release from predators enabling slower developmental rates and longer dispersal times. Phylogenetic constraints are important in many groups, yet there are modifications in larval form, developmental mode, egg flotation, parental investment, and reproductive timing that appear to be unique to the deep sea and that influence dispersal. For instance, larval duration in certain taxa is longer in the deep-water species than in many shallow-water relatives.
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48

Hearn, J. P. Reproduction in New World Primates: New Models in Medical Science. Springer, 2011.

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49

Reproduction in New World Primates: New Models in Medical Science. Springer, 2011.

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50

Hearn, J. P. Reproduction in New World Primates: New Models in Medical Science. Springer, 2012.

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