Academic literature on the topic 'Show people'

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Journal articles on the topic "Show people"

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Wilson, Clare. "Smelly fish show if people are aware." New Scientist 246, no. 3281 (May 2020): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0262-4079(20)30889-7.

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Ratner, Megan. "People are an Excuse to Show Locations." Film Quarterly 68, no. 3 (2015): 26–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/fq.2015.68.3.26.

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Tanne, Janice Hopkins. "Walking protects elderly people from dementia, studies show." BMJ 329, no. 7469 (September 30, 2004): 761.4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.329.7469.761-c.

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Arehart-Treichel, Joan. "Surprising Number of People Show Signs of Psychosis." Psychiatric News 42, no. 11 (June 2007): 16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/pn.42.11.0016.

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Brassington, Thomas. "‘Show gay people for the often-awful people they are’: Reframing queer monstrosity." Queer Studies in Media & Popular Culture 7, no. 1-2 (June 1, 2022): 27–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/qsmpc_00066_1.

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Monsters have an established presence on screen as a cipher for queer identities. However, such presentations are often limiting, with queer monsters being either irredeemably evil or eliciting viewer sympathies for their helpless monstrous condition. Both forms of queer monster are highly queerphobic, but the issue this article takes with this representational binary is that it stifles the depictions of monstrous queer characters. To offer a counterpoint, I draw attention to BBC America’s Killing Eve (2018–22) and its queer monster Villanelle (Jodie Comer). I argue that Villanelle presents a new vision of the queer monster, where queerness and monstrosity are not interlocked parts of her characterization – a disconnect that allows her to be a more compelling monster and express her queerness in a plethora of ways. In this article, I focus on two ways in which Villanelle’s queerness manifests in the show: her fashion and style; and her sense of humour. I demonstrate that Villanelle’s queer humour and style provide her with a means to be a more dangerous and effective assassin, whilst also facilitating a means for expressing her queerness in complex ways. Her style, for example, enables her to dip in and out of both butch and femme aesthetics as she pleases and her humour provides a means to disarm her targets. In all, this article points towards Villanelle’s mercurial character as a positive form of queer representation, for her constant flitting creates a queer character who can be awful and provides a means for queerness to be displayed through multiple, yet legible, ambiguities.
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Thompson, Tosin. "Burnt seeds show people used tobacco 12,000 years ago." Nature 598, no. 7881 (October 13, 2021): 397–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/d41586-021-02789-9.

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Nakao, Takashi, Satoko Tokunaga, Masahiro Takamura, Hitomi Nashiwa, Shunsuke Hayashi, and Makoto Miyatani. "Altruistic People Show No Self-Reference Effect in Memory." Journal of General Psychology 139, no. 1 (January 2012): 29–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00221309.2011.642027.

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Tam, Kim-Pong, Al Au, and Angela Ka-Yee Leung. "Attributionally more complex people show less punitiveness and racism." Journal of Research in Personality 42, no. 4 (August 2008): 1074–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2007.11.002.

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Schlesinger, Kenneth. "“Show People: Downtown Directors and the Play of Time”." Theatre Survey 44, no. 01 (May 2003): 102–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040557403000061.

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Bower, Bruce. "Chimps to people: Apes show contrasts in genetic makeup." Science News 168, no. 10 (September 3, 2005): 147. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/scin.5591681002.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Show people"

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Jessup, Karen J. "Teacher narratives of young people who show sexually harmful behaviour." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2017. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/19170/.

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Young people who show sexually harmful behaviour is a growing phenomenon. There is a host of research into the characteristics of young people and effective interventions yet there is little if any research into the phenomenon within schools. Underpinned by a social constructionist epistemology this study asks what narratives are available to talk about this phenomenon within schools and how adults in school view their role and the role of the school context. Using a focus group approach this study explores the narratives of a group of adults working in an inner city secondary school. Using thematic analysis, three narratives were interpreted from the group sessions; normal and not normal, identity of young people who show SHB and professional and personal voice. In addition, a theme of uncertainty was interpreted within each theme which offered insight into dilemmas and tensions in the narratives. Teachers in this study were positive about the role of school and recognised a role in supporting holistic needs of these young people. Future ways of working are discussed in relation to schools, teachers and educational psychologists.
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Delpech, Emmanuelle Francoise. "Directing Tartuffe or why people should see this show today?" Master's thesis, Temple University Libraries, 2011. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/212333.

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Theater
M.F.A.
This thesis documents a production of the French playwright Moliere's comedy Tartuffe at Temple Repertory Theater in Philadelphia. Set in Philadelphia's Main Line, this production provides an updated version of the play that comments on religion in contemporary America. Tartuffe is one of the best comedies written by Moliere. Banned for many years, it deranged people and touched a very tender spot in 17th century French society. America has a very different approach to religion than France. The many churches in existence make this country a deist democracy as opposed to the French secular state. The use of religion in politics, the "in God we trust" on the dollar bill, and seeing people pray in restaurants before their dinner have dictated this production be set in contemporary America. The use of clown techniques helped in finding American archetypes that would fit the characters. Directing choices, designers and actors created a world that tells the story of a rich American family threatened by the extremist religious discourse of a hypocrite. All these choices try to honor the heightened style of Moliere's language and, here, of Ranjit Bolt's very modern and fluid translation.
Temple University--Theses
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Nuttall, Clare. "Exploration of successful intervention with children and young people who show school refusal behaviours." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2012. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/exploration-of-successful-intervention-with-children-and-young-people-who-show-school-refusal-behaviours(c4eb0aa6-c3ed-4eb6-9e64-1c8e08c3d188).html.

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A certain degree of anxiety amongst children and young people is common given the pressures that children and young people face but it becomes problematic when it starts to affect children’s emotional well being and willingness to go to school. Interventions to support school refusal behaviours have reported success with some individuals, however there are many individuals for whom these interventions are unsuccessful (Lauchlan, 2003). Whilst individualised intervention programmes may be important, the factors associated with successful involvement in cases of school refusal behaviour are unclear.The present study explored factors associated with successful involvement through completing an exploratory case study looking at two successful cases of school refusal behaviour retrospectively. The research sought the perceptions of the young person, their parent, school staff and professionals from health and education to identify what they perceived to be effective, how they understood these factors to be effective and what might have led to more success and why in semi structured interviews. Thematic analysis was completed to identify emerging themes to provide a dynamic and triangulated view about factors which were associated with success.A number of common themes emerged between the two cases and in both cases there were a number of interacting factors which appeared to be associated with successful involvement. These factors have been represented in the ecological model of successful reintegration. This model illustrates the role of psychological factors at the level of the child, factors supporting the psychological factors at the level of the child, factors supporting the family and the role of professionals and systems. In addition, the model recognises the influence of context and how the factors associated with success need to be understood within context. The model is discussed along with the implications of the findings for practice and future research with reflections on the research process made.
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Karamagi, Sharon Benna Kyakyo. "'Becoming citizens': young people making sense of citizenship on a South African community radio station youth show." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002898.

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This research set out to investigate the role that community radio can potentially play as a space in which young people engage with their own role as citizens and, in so doing, participate in discussions that seek to address social problems in a community divided by class, income, gender and race. The study examines how a local community radio station - Radio Grahamstown - developed a youth programme Y4Yin which the producers of the show and its audience came together to negotiate the meaning of citizenship. The study examines whether this interactive programme was able to function as something like a public sphere where in young people were able to develop a greater sense of agency, at least in the realm of citizenship. Using evidence gathered through focus group discussions with a group of young school-going leamers, interviews conducted with the producers of the show Y4Y, and drawing on Dahlgren's elaboration of a functional public sphere, the research concludes that the show provided a useful platform for Grahamstown high school students to develop their own notions of citizenship and to, at least partially and tentatively, build some 'bridges' across the vectors of socio-economic division in the town. However, the research also concludes that the Y4Y producers often failed to use a mode of address contemporary to the youth and often did not use production techniques congruent with young people's cultural tastes. This limited the programme's appeal and its potential as an enabler of discussion about notions of citizenship and as a platform for social bridging. In addition, because of the producers' control over the choice of topics put up for discussion, open interaction was more limited than could have been expected. In addition, the study also concludes that various limitations to the leamers' freedom of expression (including their fear that teachers might be listening in to the shows) inhibited the programme's role as a deliberative public sphere where issues could be aired, common ground found, and solutions discussed.
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Martin, Victoria. "Creating a space in the freak show Katharine Butler Hathaway's The little locksmith /." Laramie, Wyo. : University of Wyoming, 2008. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1798481001&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=18949&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Danaher, Patrick Alan, and danaher@usq edu au. "Learning on the Run: Traveller Education for Itinerant Show Children in Coastal and Western Queensland." Central Queensland University. Education and Innovation, 2001. http://library-resources.cqu.edu.au./thesis/adt-QCQU/public/adt-QCQU20060830.110820.

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“Learning on the Run” refers to the educational experiences of the primary school children travelling along the agricultural show ‘circuits’ in coastal and western Queensland. This thesis examines those educational experiences by drawing on the voices of the show children, their parents, their home tutors and their teachers from the Brisbane School of Distance Education, which from 1989 to 1999 implemented a specialised program of Traveller education for these children (in 2000 a separate school was established for them). The thesis focusses on the interplay among marginalisation, resistance and transformation in the spaces of the show people’s itinerancy. It deploys Michel de Certeau’s (1984, 1986) concept of ‘tactics of consumption’ and Mikhail Bakhtin’s (1986a) notions of ‘outsiddness’ and ‘creative understanding’ to interrogate the show people’s engagement with their absence of place, the construction of their otherness and forms of seemingly unproblematic knowledge about their schooling. Data gathering techniques included semi-structured interviews with forty-two people between 1992 and 2000 in seven sites in Queensland - Mackay, Bundaberg (over two years), Emerald, Brisbane, Rockhampton and Yeppoon - and document collection. The thesis’s major finding is that the show people’s resistance and transformation of their marginalising experiences have enabled them to initiate and implement a significant counternarrative to the traditional narrative (and associated stereotypes) attending their itinerancy. This counternarrative has underpinned a fundamental change in their schooling provision, from a structure that worked to marginalise and disempower them to a specialised form of Traveller education. This change contributes crucially to understanding and theorising the spaces of itinerancy, and highlights the broader significance of the Queensland show people’s “learning on the run”.
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Nordensved, Jennie, and Jessica Dahlqvist. "Sex, a one mans show : Perceptions and experience of sexuality, contraceptives, unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion among young people in Kisumu, Kenya – A qualitative study." Thesis, Högskolan Dalarna, Omvårdnad, 2011. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-6052.

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This study aimed to explore perceptions and experiences concerning sexuality, contraceptives, unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion among young people in Kisumu, Kenya. The design of the study was inductive with a qualitative approach using personal in-depth interviews. Eight participants (four female and four male) were asked to describe their perceptions and experience concerning sexuality, contraceptives, unwanted pregnancies and unsafe abortion. The result showed that culture and norms, misconceptions and gender based power in sexuality are factors that impact Sexual Reproductive Health among young people in Kisumu today. Unwanted pregnancy was described as a shame, a burden and a destroyed life which lead to many unsafely induced abortions. The findings indicate that youth interventions are important, such as engaging young men in unwanted pregnancy and thus unsafe abortions and to empower young women.
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Volpe, Maíra Muhringer. "O divã no palco: discurso terapêutico, indústria cultural e a produção de bens culturais com pessoas comuns." Universidade de São Paulo, 2013. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8132/tde-04112013-131315/.

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Não é raro encontrar na televisão brasileira, e mesmo na rádio, emissões que trazem depoimentos de pessoas comuns comentados por especialistas, sobretudo, psicólogos. Desentendimentos conjugais, problemas com filhos, desavenças com vizinhos, conflitos no trabalho, são alguns dos temas exibidos. Trata-se de versões cujo formato orienta também produções estadunidenses, europeias e latino-americanas, cuja temática, apropriada pela indústria cultural nacional, difunde um discurso terapêutico. Embora as ideias de manipulação dos participantes e de sensacionalismo na busca por audiência sejam justificativas para a veiculação desse tipo de emissão, existem outros sentidos que podem ser atribuídos quando se aproximam as razões que mobilizam pessoas a dar visibilidade a histórias e questões consideradas de foro íntimo. Foram esses outros sentidos aqui investigados. Uma abordagem, portanto, a partir dos participantes de No Divã do Gikovate (Rádio CBN), Casos de Família (SBT) e Márcia (Bandeirantes) norteou a pesquisa apresentada. A interação social no palco, nos bastidores e na plateia foram vias de acesso a dois grupos sociais envolvidos na produção e no consumo desses bens culturais. O estudo dessas interações apontou lógicas diferentes de produção: uma demanda espontânea, entre aqueles que integram as emissões animadas pelo Dr. Gikovate, e um sistema de produção da exibição, ou seja, uma cadeia produtiva por trás das emissões televisivas que abarca tanto profissionais formalmente contratados pelas emissoras quanto pessoas engajadas informalmente. Tais interações indicam ainda grupos que possuem universos mentais distintos, com repertórios expressivos e recursos afetivos específicos. Seus integrantes apropriam-se do discurso terapêutico difundido transformando-o em senso prático para sua vida afetiva.
Its not rare to find in Brazilian television and radio, transmissions that bring ordinary peoples testimonials commented by experts, mainly psychologists. Marital fights, problems with children, quarrels with neighbors are some of the themes presented. Those are Brazilian versions of programs which circulate around the United States reaching Latin American and European countries, which the thematic, taken by their own national culture industry, diffuses a therapeutic discourse. Although the participants ideas manipulation and the sensationalism in the quest for audience are explanations for placing this kind of transmission, there are other senses that may be attributed when one gets closer to the reasons that mobilize those people to bring out stories and affairs once considered intimate. These other senses were the ones studied here. Thus, an approach close to that of the participants of No Divã do Gikovate (Gikovates Divan, Radio CBN), Casos de Família (Family Affairs, SBT) and Márcia (Marcia, Bandeirantes) guided this research. The social interactions on stage and backstage were ways to reach these two social groups involved in the production and consumerism of these cultural products. The study of these interactions led to different logics of production: a spontaneous demand between those who compose the transmissions cheered by Dr. Gikovate, and a production system of exhibition, which means a productive chain behind the television transmissions that reach professionals formally hired by the networks and people informally involved. Those interactions have also indicated groups with different mental universes, with specific expressive repertoire and affective appeal. Their integrants employ the therapeutic discourse, transforming it into logic of practice to be used in their affective life.
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Tsui, Yu-tung Victor, and 徐宇彤. "Comparisons of shoe-length and shoe-width fitness in people with diabetes, diabetes sensory neuropathy and non diabetes." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10722/206513.

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Introduction Ill-fitting footwear is one of the well-known risk factors causing foot ulceration in the diabetic population. Current literature for fitness of foot dimensions is insufficient, especially on foot-shoe length and foot-shoe width measurement in absolute numerical differences. The aims of the study were to compare and identify the footwear fitness in diabetic patients with peripheral sensory neuropathy, diabetic patients without peripheral neuropathy and non diabetes. Materials and Method   Diabetes patients were assessed for peripheral sensory neuropathy by two sensory tests, 10-g monofilament test using 10-g Semmes-Weinstein monofilament and vibration perception threshold test using neurotheisometer. Abnormal results of both tests indicated diabetes sensory neuropathy. The dimensions of foot length and foot width were determined by the Brannock device while internal shoe length and internal shoe width were measured by an inside caliper. The mean of internal shoe-length difference and shoe-width difference of three groups were calculated and compared. Reference ranges of 10-15mm of shoe-length difference and 0-7mm were selected from past literature. The values of shoe-length and shoe-width differences were dichotomized into correct and incorrect fit category. Footwear fitness of the three groups was compared. Demographics of patients, information on self foot care, shoe size check and footwear habit were collected for correlation analysis. Results Data was collected from 20 diabetes patients with sensory neuropathy, 60 diabetes patients without neuropathy and 40 non diabetes controls. There were significant difference in shoe-length difference among three groups, with larger shoe-length difference in diabetic neuropathy group (left: 21.9mm, / right: 21.7mm), followed by non neuropathy diabetes (left: 15.2mm, / right: 15.5mm) and controls (left: 13.4mm, / right: 14.5mm) (left p=0.002 / right p=0.008). The shoe-length differences of both diabetes groups exceeded the reference range, indicating long footwear. No significant difference was reported related to shoe-width difference. Analysis of shoe fit category showed around 15-17% of diabetes patients were wearing correctly fit shoes in both length and width. A high prevalence of diabetes patient had ill-fitting footwear while nearly half of them wear shoes with correct width but incorrect length. There is nearly no correlations between shoe-length fit, shoe-width fit and frequency of self foot check, frequency of footwear size check and frequency of diabetic footwear education. Discussion Most diabetes patients wear ill-fitting footwear, especially those with peripheral sensory neuropathy when compared to control group. There is significant difference in shoe-length difference among the three groups, with reference to the 10-15mm range as the gap length allowance. Diabetic patients tend to wear long and loose footwear in this study even they had past foot education and practice proper self foot check regularly. These might imply incomprehensive proper diabetic footwear education and self footwear assessment in current diabetes care pathway. These components are essential in diabetes foot care and people with diabetes are highly recommended to select a pair of good fit footwear. Further research is required to standardize the methodologies of measurement in foot dimensions and footwear fitness as well as investigate on relations of additional foot parameters in shoe fitting.
published_or_final_version
Orthopaedics and Traumatology
Master
Master of Medical Sciences
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Chapman, J. D. "Improving the design of the curved rocker shoe for people with diabetes." Thesis, University of Salford, 2014. http://usir.salford.ac.uk/31862/.

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Introduction: Foot ulceration and re-ulceration are a serious problem in people with diabetes as the outcome can be lower limb amputation, reducing quality of life and increasing mortality. The pathogenesis of foot ulceration is multifactorial with neuropathy, alterations in foot structure, callus formation and increased plantar foot pressure. The most effective intervention for reducing plantar pressure is the curved rocker outsole. To date this design has been prescribed from clinical intuition rather than scientific evidence. Therefore the studies within this thesis aimed to improve our understanding of how to best to design, and also prescribe, a rocker sole. Methods: Ethical approval was obtained from the University of Salford and the NHS. Study 1 investigated the independent effect of varying the three outsole design features (apex angle, apex position and rocker angle) on plantar pressure in 24 people with diabetes and healthy participants. In-shoe pressure data was collected using Pedar-x and analysed using Matlab. Study 2 investigated the effect of varying apex position in combination with rocker angle, in 87 people with diabetes, and aimed to establish how many people would receive sufficient offloading when wearing a pre-defined rocker design. Study 3 investigated a new method of prescribing a rocker sole using artificial neural networks with an input of gait variables on 78 people with diabetes. Gait data was collected using Vicon and analysed using Visual-3D and Matlab. Results: The results of Study 1 suggested that fixing apex angle at 95° would be a suitable compromise to offload the high risk areas (medial forefoot). It also suggested that apex position and rocker angle needed more investigation. Therefore, in Study 2 the combined effect of two rocker angles and four apex positions were investigated. Despite some inter-subject variability, this study showed that over 60% of participants received sufficient offloading when walking in a mean optimal design. Furthermore, over 60% of people received sufficient offloading with the smaller rocker angle of 15°. The results in Study 3 showed there was low accuracy when predicting an individual optimal shoe using gait variables as inputs (34-49%). Conclusions: This project has shown it is possible to significantly reduce plantar pressures in people with diabetes with a well-designed rocker shoe (95° apex angle, individual apex position and 15° rocker angle). This finding paves the way for future clinical trials which could provide robust clinical evidence for the use of rocker shoes.
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Books on the topic "Show people"

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Show people. New York: Dramatists Play Service, 2007.

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ill, Lamont Priscilla, ed. Show time. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2011.

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Stauffacher, Sue. Show time. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2011.

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Independent Living North-West (1998 : Manchester). The show where you can. Bristol: Indpendent Living, 1991.

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Haynes, Jasmine. Show and tell. New York: Berkley Sensation, 2008.

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Young, Jordan R. Let me entertain you: Conversations with show people. Beverly Hills, CA: Moonstone Press, 1988.

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Breedlove, Lynn. Lynnee Breedlove's one freak show. San Francisco: Manic D Press, 2009.

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Kats, Jewel. Miss Popular steals the show. Ann Arbor, MI: Marvelous Spirit Press, an imprint of Loving Healing Press, 2014.

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The bully show!: An interactive play for young people. Woodstock, Ill: Dramatic Pub., 2006.

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Missouri legends: Famous people from the Show Me State. St. Louis, Mo: Reedy Press, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Show people"

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Behrndt, Synne K. "People Show in Rehearsal." In Devising in Process, 30–49. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-10535-6_2.

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Kellner, Douglas. "Spectacle of Horror: Brexit Plus, Angry White People, and the National Nightmare." In American Horror Show, 39–56. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6300-974-4_4.

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Sotos, Rachael. "A Tea Party forMe the People." In The Ultimate Daily Show and Philosophy, 281–97. Oxford: John Wiley & Sons, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118617380.ch19.

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Buckingham, David, and Sara Bragg. "Show and Tell — Learning from Television Drama." In Young People, Sex and the Media, 155–84. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230508637_7.

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Counsell, Steve, Keith Phalp, Emilia Mendes, and Stella Geddes. "What Formal Models Cannot Show Us: People Issues During the Prototyping Process." In Product Focused Software Process Improvement, 3–15. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11497455_3.

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Sobieski, Lynn. "Breaking the Boundaries: The People Show, Lumiere & Son and Hesitate and Demonstrate." In Contemporary British Theatre, 89–106. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-25091-2_7.

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Sobieski, Lynn. "Breaking the Boundaries: The People Show, Lumiere & Son and Hesitate and Demonstrate." In Contemporary British Theatre, 89–106. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-23078-5_7.

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Zarankin, Andrés. "The Heritage Horror Show: A Critical Analysis of the Relationship Among Monuments, Power, and People." In Latin American Heritage, 67–81. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-58448-5_5.

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Bong, Way Kiat, Florian Maußer, Margot van Eck, Diogo De Araujo, Jorg Tibosch, Tobias Glaum, and Weiqin Chen. "Designing Nostalgic Tangible User Interface Application for Elderly People." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 471–79. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-58805-2_56.

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AbstractOur elderly population faces challenges in accepting and using new digital technology, and tangible user interface (TUI) can contribute as a more intuitive user interface in addressing these challenges. Studies have shown that nostalgic memories trigger positive emotions, which can provide better experiences for elderly people in learning and using new technology. However, the use of nostalgia in TUI for elderly people has been little and therefore the understanding on how nostalgia can contribute in TUI promoting technology acceptance among elderly people is limited. In order to address this knowledge gap, in this study we have created a nostalgic TUI application for elderly people through three iterations of design, development and evaluation. The results show that by adopting the element of nostalgia into the TUI application, elderly people could learn to use new technology in a more intuitive way. They could relate the new technology to their old positive memories. However, they had expectations that the TUI application would work exactly like the old fashioned way. Through the research process, we gathered and reflected on the lessons learned, which can serve as guidelines for using the concept of nostalgia in designing TUI application for elderly people’s technology acceptance.
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Nicolau, Lurdes. "Roma at School: A Look at the Past and the Present. The Case of Portugal." In Social and Economic Vulnerability of Roma People, 153–63. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-52588-0_10.

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AbstractThe schooling process has become more widespread among the Portuguese Roma population since 1974, with the end of the Estado Novo dictatorship and the establishment of democracy. Nevertheless, the Roma nomadism or semi-nomadism, financial shortcomings and the absence of social/cultural/family stimuli are some of the reasons that explain their low school attendance rates. Only in the last decades has such attendance increased, as a result of the implementation of several public policies, particularly of the Social Integration Income. This social policy, implemented in 1996, introduced important changes in this population, especially in areas such as schooling, personal hygiene, housing, health, or sedentism.Recent research has shown an increase in the educational level of the Roma population, but school dropouts and failure remain high. This tendency was also studied in the northeast of Portugal, in a PhD thesis about the relationships between the Roma and school. In the present research work, a qualitative methodology was adopted, using direct and participant observation, as well as interviews to some Roma parents and non-Roma teachers. Both groups emphasize the main difficulties of Roma children at school.The conclusions show that several factors affect these students’ schooling nowadays, especially poor housing conditions, parents’ illiteracy or low schooling, lack of daily study monitoring at home, absence of models in their environment, non-attendance of pre-school, and discrimination against them.
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Conference papers on the topic "Show people"

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Ahmed, Nabeel. "Systemizing People - Systems To Manage People Or People To Manage Systems." In SPE Middle East Oil and Gas Show and Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/141555-ms.

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Al-Mutairi, Saleh H., Reem J. Al-Jummah, Sami Bou-Mikael, Ahmad D. Al-Aruri, Vegesna Venkata S. Raju, and Paul Izzett. "Developing People through Mentoring to Transfer Knowledge and Technology." In SPE Middle East Oil & Gas Show and Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/172664-ms.

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de Melo, Celso M., and Jonathan Gratch. "People show envy, not guilt, when making decisions with machines." In 2015 International Conference on Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction (ACII). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/acii.2015.7344589.

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Code´e, Hans, and Ewoud Verhoef. "Radioactive Waste: Show Time?" In ASME 2009 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2009-16309.

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Time will render radioactive waste harmless. How can we manage the time radioactive substances remain harmful? Just ‘wait and see’ or ‘marking time’ is not an option. We need to isolate the waste from our living environment and control it as long as necessary. For the situation in the Netherlands, it is obvious that a period of long term storage is needed. Both the small volume of waste and the limited financial possibilities are determining factors. Time is needed to let the volume of waste grow and to let the money, needed for disposal, grow in a capital growth fund. An organisation such as COVRA — the radioactive waste organisation in the Netherlands — can only function when it has good, open and transparent relationship with the public and particularly with the local population. If we tell people that we safely store radioactive waste for 100 years, they often ask: “That long?” How can we explain the long-term aspect of radioactive waste management in a way people can relate to? In this paper, an overview is given of the activities of COVRA on the communication of radioactive waste management.
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Briscoe, Helen. "P-28 Publicity, pitfalls and people – a hospice enters an rhs show garden." In People, Partnerships and Potential, 16 – 18 November 2016, Liverpool. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2016-001245.52.

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Astuti, Santi Indra. "Political TV Talk Show for Young People in the Disruptive Era." In International Conference on Emerging Media & Communication. European Publisher, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2022.01.02.40.

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Xing, Yan, and Yu-feng Zhao. "Discussed on the Show of "People-Oriented" Principle in Older Settlements Planning." In 2010 International Conference on E-Product E-Service and E-Entertainment (ICEEE 2010). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iceee.2010.5660696.

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Morgan, Maggie, Vicki Hanson, Chris Martin, Janet Hughes, and Alan Newell. "Accessibility Challenge - a Game Show Investigating the Accessibility of Computer Systems for Disabled People." In Proceeding of the twenty-sixth annual CHI conference extended abstracts. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1358628.1358724.

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Cadei, Luca, Gianmarco Rossi, Lorenzo Lancia, Danilo Loffreno, Andrea Corneo, Diletta Milana, Marco Montini, et al. "Digital Lighthouse: A Scalable Model for Digital Transformation in Oil & Gas." In SPE Conference at Oman Petroleum & Energy Show. SPE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/200149-ms.

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Abstract Energy companies are latecomers to digitization with respect to other business, but new technologies like Big Data, Cloud infrastructure and Artificial Intelligence offer great opportunities. Here we present an integrated approach to the digitalization of an O&G plant aiming to offer operator safety enhancement, production optimization and reduction of the environmental impact to maximize the asset value. This has been accomplished by complex and continuous work powered by the people who are the engine and the real target of the digital transformation process. In the key study hereby presented, an all-round effort has been made to empower the operator's everyday work with digital and innovative tools supporting reservoir, maintenance, production and HSE workflow. Starting from a number of various legacy systems, a single integrated dashboard was built: The Integrated Operation Centre (IOC). IOC is now available on PC and smartphones to all site personnel both at the operational and managerial level. New innovative systems were developed and deployed into IOC to capitalize on the data acquired during years of plant activities. Machine learning and advanced analytics solutions provide new daily insight on how to efficiently schedule maintenance operations and avoid off-specs and downtime on critical equipment, while complex production optimizers help technicians react to unexpected situations and maximize production. Via IoT (Internet of Things) and portable devices, new tools and workflows were deployed onsite to ease the work and enhance the safety of workers with focus on usage of PPE and providing rapid information to locate workers during emergency situations. People from both site and company headquarters ensured the success of the digital transformation by working together in an Agile Method during the development phase and by coaching in the roll-out phase. New professional roles, like data scientist and big data engineers, joined effort with experienced operators to ensure the success of this journey. This cooperation was at the basis of a comprehensive change management effort, which ensured a smooth and constant change in the way the personnel thinks, acts and reacts. This, we believe, is at the very heart of any fundamental transformation, being it digital or not.
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Okolo, Chuwkuemeka, David Onazi, Ime John, Emmanuel Oga, Ademola Lukman Lawal, Daniel Bassey, and Mansur Ramalan. "PW 2568 ‘Bringing peace to the people’: radio show as a resource to knowledge on gun violence." In Safety 2018 abstracts. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/injuryprevention-2018-safety.333.

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Reports on the topic "Show people"

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Thompson, Stephen, Brigitte Rohwerder, and Clement Arockiasamy. Freedom of Religious Belief and People with Disabilities: A Case Study of People with Disabilities from Religious Minorities in Chennai, India. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), June 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/creid.2021.003.

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India has a unique and complex religious history, with faith and spirituality playing an important role in everyday life. Hinduism is the majority religion, and there are many minority religions. India also has a complicated class system and entrenched gender structures. Disability is another important identity. Many of these factors determine people’s experiences of social inclusion or exclusion. This paper explores how these intersecting identities influence the experience of inequality and marginalisation, with a particular focus on people with disabilities from minority religious backgrounds. A participatory qualitative methodology was employed in Chennai, to gather case studies that describe in-depth experiences of participants. Our findings show that many factors that make up a person’s identity intersect in India and impact how someone is included or excluded by society, with religious minority affiliation, caste, disability status, and gender all having the potential to add layers of marginalisation. These various identity factors, and how individuals and society react to them, impact on how people experience their social existence. Identity factors that form the basis for discrimination can be either visible or invisible, and discrimination may be explicit or implicit. Despite various legal and human rights frameworks at the national and international level that aim to prevent marginalisation, discrimination based on these factors is still prevalent in India. While some tokenistic interventions and schemes are in place to overcome marginalisation, such initiatives often only focus on one factor of identity, rather than considering intersecting factors. People with disabilities continue to experience exclusion in all aspects of their lives. Discrimination can exist both between, as well as within, religious communities, and is particularly prevalent in formal environments. Caste-based exclusion continues to be a major problem in India. The current socioeconomic environment and political climate can be seen to perpetuate marginalisation based on these factors. However, when people are included in society, regardless of belonging to a religious minority, having a disability, or being a certain caste, the impact on their life can be very positive.
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Stark, Sasha, Heather Wardle, and Isabel Burdett. Examining lottery play and risk among young people in Great Britain. GREO, April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.33684/2021.002.

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Purpose & Significance: Despite the popularity of lottery and scratchcards and some evidence of gambling problems among players, limited research focuses on the risks of lottery and scratchcard play and predictors of problems, especially among young people. The purpose of this project is to examine whether lottery and scratchcard participation is related to gambling problems among 16-24 year olds in Great Britain and whether general and mental health and gambling behaviours explain this relationship. Methodology: Samples of 16-24 year olds were pooled from the 2012, 2015, and 2016 Gambling in England and Scotland: Combined Data from the Health Survey for England and the Scottish Health Survey (n=3,454). Bivariate analyses and Firth method logistic regression were used to examine the relationship between past-year lottery and scratchcard participation and gambling problems, assessing the attenuating role of mental wellbeing, mental health disorders, self-assessed general health, and playing other games in past year. Results: There is a significant association between scratchcard play and gambling problems. The association somewhat attenuated but remained significant after taking into account wellbeing, mental health disorders, general health, and engagement in other gambling activities. Findings also show that gambling problems are further predicted by age (20-24 years), gender (male), lower wellbeing, and playing any other gambling games. Implications: Results are valuable for informing youth-focused education, decisions around the legal age for National Lottery products, and the development of safer gambling initiatives for high risk groups and behaviours, such as scratchcard play.
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Tian, Yichang, Hu Deng, Zhimin Xin, Xueqian Zhang, and Xiaokui Yang. Premature ovarian insufficiency is associated with increased risk of depression, anxiety and poor life quality: a meta-analysis. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, January 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2023.1.0020.

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Review question / Objective: A meta-analysis of cross-sectional, case-control and cohort studies (S) was conducted to explore whether women with POI/POF (P) could increase risk of depression, anxiety, and poor quality of life (O). Intervention studies (I) are eligible only if pre-intervention data were available(I) and the comparator(C) of this meta-analysis was people who do not suffer from POI (age-matched). Condition being studied: Several studies have been conducted to show that POI affects the quality of life of patients, of which psychological and psychosocial factors cannot be ignored as a part. Most studies have shown that POI patients are more prone to negative emotions such as depression and anxiety than normal people, but some studies have also shown that normal POI patients are psychologically indistinguishable from normal people. Therefore, meta-analysis is needed to determine the effect of POI on psychological factors and to better guide the clinical treatment plan.
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M, Pamela R., Kristin Meeks, Victoria Smiegocki, and Kenitra Brown. The ABCs of Racial Disparity. SMU Dedman School of Law, July 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.25172/dc.6.

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Data show that Black and White people use marijuana at roughly equal rates. Yet in 2018, in six of Dallas County's biggest cities, Black people were vastly overrepresented in the enforcement of low-level drug crimes. With a look at enforcement trends before the election of District Attorney John Creuzot, this study launches a series of reports about how his reforms have impacted Dallas County.
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Kafkoutsou, Natalia-Rafaella, and Spyros-Vlad Oikonomou. Tipping the Scales: The role of responsibility- and solidarity-sharing in the situation on the Greek islands. Oxfam, Greek Council for Refugees, February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2021.7321.

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This report assesses the impact of EU countries’ refusal to relocate asylum seekers on the Greek islands. It illustrates that they have consistently failed to show solidarity by not delivering on commitments to relocate people, either by refusing to participate in the first place or by not fulfilling their pledges. This has left thousands of people in need of assistance on the Greek islands. EU countries have also consistently tried to avoid their legal obligations by putting barriers in place to keep families apart.
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Fillipin, Federico, Pamela Seron, and Ruvistay Gutierrez-Arias. Effectiveness of antihypertensive drugs to prevent cognitive decline, mild cognitive impairment, and dementia. An overview of systematic reviews. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.12.0057.

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Review question / Objective: To determine effectiveness of antihypertensive drugs to prevent different dementia subtypes such as Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia. Condition being studied: Dementia is a global health burden, with the number of affected individuals increasing. A recent meta-analysis reported that the prevalence of all-type dementia was 697 per 10,000 people and the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease was 324 per 10,000 people. The SHEP and SYST-EUR were the two first randomized controlled trials to show that hypertension treatment reduces dementia risk.
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Tamale, Nona. Adding Fuel to Fire: How IMF demands for austerity will drive up inequality worldwide. Oxfam, August 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2021.7864.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has dealt a huge blow to every country, and many governments have struggled to meet their populations’ urgent needs during the crisis. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has stepped in to offer extra support to a large number of countries during the pandemic. However, Oxfam’s analysis shows that as of 15 March 2021, 85% of the 107 COVID-19 loans negotiated between the IMF and 85 governments indicate plans to undertake austerity once the health crisis abates. The findings in this briefing paper show that the IMF is systematically encouraging countries to adopt austerity measures once the pandemic subsides, risking a severe spike in already increased inequality levels. A variety of studies have revealed the uneven distribution of the burden of austerity, which is more likely to be shouldered by women, low-income households and vulnerable groups, while the wealth of the richest people increases. Oxfam joins global institutions and civil society in urging governments worldwide and the IMF to focus their energies instead on a people-centred, just and equal recovery that will fight inequality and not fuel it. Austerity will not ‘build back better’.
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Bolton, Laura. The Economic Impact of COVID-19 in Colombia. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.073.

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Available data provide a picture for the macro-economy of Colombia, agriculture, and infrastructure. Recent data on trends on public procurement were difficult to find within the scope of this rapid review. In 2020, macro-level employment figures show a large drop between February and April when COVID-19 lockdown measures were first introduced, followed by a gradual upward trend. In December 2020, the employment rate was 4.09 percentage points lower than the employment rate in December 2019. Macro-level figures from the National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) show that a higher percentage of men experienced job losses than women in November 2020. However, the evidence presented by the Universidad Nacional de Colombia based on the DANE great integrated house survey shows that a higher proportion of all jobs lost were lost by women in the second quarter. It may be that the imbalance shifted over time, but it is not possible to directly compare the data. Evidence suggests that women were disproportionately more burdened by home activities due to the closure of schools and childcare. There is also a suggestion that women who have lost out where jobs able to function during lockdowns with technology are more likely to be held by men. Literature also shows that women have lower levels of technology literacy. There is a lack of reliable data for understanding the economic impacts of COVID-19 for people living with disabilities. A report on the COVID-19 response and disability for the Latin America region recommends improving collaboration between policymakers and non-governmental organisations. Younger people experienced greater job losses. Data for November 2020 show 3.3 percent of the population aged under 25 lost their job compared to 1.8 percent of those employed between 24 and 54. Agriculture, livestock, and fishing increased by 2.8% in 2020 compared to 2019. And the sector as a whole grew 3.4% between the third and fourth quarters of 2020. In terms of sector differences, construction was harder hit by the initial mobility restrictions than agriculture. Construction contracted by 30.5% in the second quarter of 2020. It is making a relatively healthy recovery with reports that 84% of projects being reactivated following return to work. The President of the Colombian Chamber of Construction predicting an 8.4% growth in the construction of housing and other buildings in 2021.
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Arora, Saurabh, Arora, Saurabh, Ajit Menon, M. Vijayabaskar, Divya Sharma, and V. Gajendran. People’s Relational Agency in Confronting Exclusion in Rural South India. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), December 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/steps.2021.004.

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Social exclusion is considered critical for understanding poverty, livelihoods, inequality and political participation in rural India. Studies show how exclusion is produced through relations of power associated with gender, caste, religion and ethnicity. Studies also document how people confront their exclusion. We use insights from these studies – alongside science and technology studies – and rely on life history narratives of ‘excluded’ people from rural Tamil Nadu, to develop a new approach to agency as constituted by two contrasting ways of relating: control and care. These ways of relating are at once social and material. They entangle humans with each other and with material worlds of nature and technology, while being mediated by structures such as social norms and cultural values. Relations of control play a central role in constituting exclusionary forms of agency. In contrast, relations of care are central to the agency of resistance against exclusion and of livelihood-building by the ‘excluded’. Relations can be transformed through agency in uncertain ways that are highly sensitive to trans-local contexts. We offer examples of policy-relevant questions that our approach can help to address for apprehending social exclusion in rural India and elsewhere.
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Rada, Gabriel. What are the effects of using drugs packaged in unit doses to treat malaria? SUPPORT, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.30846/170305.

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Millions of people contract malaria each year. The WHO currently promotes artemisinin-based combination therapy for treating uncomplicated malaria, but this may be more difficult for patients to correctly adhere to than other treatments. Packaging a course of treatment in units of a single dose may be a more effective way of ensuring that patients take the correct dosage, and thus of increasing treatment success. In this approach, drugs to be taken together are packaged adjacent to each other, sometimes with colours or other markers to show that the drugs should be taken together.
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