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1

Thulin, Lesley. "“My Case,” Her Cure: William Hay's Permissible Gender Fluidity and Mrs. Stephens's Controversy." Eighteenth-Century Life 46, no. 2 (April 1, 2022): 1–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00982601-9664384.

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In Deformity: An Essay (1754), William Hay offers an autobiographical account of his life as a hunchbacked member of the House of Commons, followed by an appendix, titled “My Case,” which details an experimental health regimen he adopted to treat the more quotidian ailment of chronic bladder stones. In an apparent disjunction with the preceding philosophical essay, “My Case” brings deformity into a medicalized, rather than humanized, register, crediting Joanna Stephens's controversial domestic remedy—and Hay's subsequent adjustment of it—with allowing him to write the text. This article compares the reception history of Stephens's recipe and Deformity: An Essay, examining why Stephens attracted censure whereas Hay garnered approval for endorsing the same basic treatment. Focusing on both Stephens's and Hay's gender-fluid personae, I argue that Hay, unlike Stephens, was able to demonstrate an unusually nimble approach to the eighteenth century's emergent categories of gender, because his deformity, gender, and class helped, rather than hindered, such persona making.
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Codell, Julie. "Local to National: Victorian Industrialist Art Collectors’ Geographies." Artium Quaestiones, no. 34 (December 27, 2023): 197–220. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/aq.2023.34.7.

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After 1850, the middle and working classes sought cultural education, which John Ruskin, among others, identified as a signifier of civilization and national greatness. Working Men’s Colleges, three 1870 university Slade Professorships in art history, proliferating art publications, and emerging regional museums offered opportunities to become conversant with visual art were then equated with social mobility and Englishness. Amid this cultural nationalism, critic F. G. Stephens’s 100+ Athenaeum series, “The Private Collections of England” (1873–1887), transformed collectors into national heroes. Scholars have noted the rising profile of collectors in 19th-century Europe and the US, in which Stephens’s series participated. Stephens detailed these collections’ expanded geography in England’s industrial north, turning local art collecting into a national, unifying force, a transformation made possible by his periodical serialization itself. These collectors, industrialists, merchants and bankers exemplified a new middle-class social, cultural and political authority. Most of them intended to bequeath their collections philanthropically to museums, thus shaping public tastes and the canon. They were personally and socially networked with artists and with each other, often working in complementary industries. Stephens interspersed his detailed descriptions of artworks with exhibition histories across translocal and transnational spaces, using the power of the press to weave a network between collectors and the public and a shared cultural history that endorsed collectors’ new public identity. However, Stephens also raised tensions about the geography of collecting, emphasizing collectors’ local places while presenting them as shaping a national space in their homogeneous taste and support of the same living artists and even the same pictorial subjects. In this way, Stephens straddled and flattened differences between national and regional market forces when, ironically, England’s art market was be coming increasingly international. This geographical layering is explored here in the context of the rise of provincial art institutions, the period’s notion of national schools and in anticipating the features of the current geohistory of art. I will explore two devices associated with the periodical press: ekphrasis and serialization, both of which Stephens deploys. Stephens wrote long ekphrases on works in these collection and omitted illustrations, noting in several comments that the Athenaeum’s middle-class readers were already familiar with artists’ works. This presumption and his use of 19th-century serialization, used by novelists whose chapters appeared across multiple issues of periodicals, combing to create a powerful force binding readers to his elevation of collectors’ social, national and cultural roles.
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3

Zhang, Yueyang. "The Stylistic Features of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man from the Perspective of Corpus Stylistics." Communications in Humanities Research 10, no. 1 (October 31, 2023): 7–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.54254/2753-7064/10/20231210.

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A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man was Irish writer James Joyces first published novel. The novel tells the story of the protagonist Stephen grow from a little child to an artist. Although Joyce uses third-person narration in the novel, he describes the surrounding society from Stephens point of view everywhere. When Stephen grew up, his thoughts gradually matured, and he gradually changed from obedience to rebellion. The stylistic features of the novel also changed a lot in this process. Corpus stylistics is a scientific stylistic research method which combines qualitative research with quantitative research. With the support of corpus stylistics, the author studies and analyzes the stylistic changes in the novels during Stephens childhood, adolescence and youth, and explains the causes of the corresponding characteristics. Through profound analysis, the author finally draws the conclusion: With the growth of the protagonist, the vocabulary of the novel becomes increasingly difficult and rich, the use of sentence grammar gradually becomes mature, and the difficulty of the text gradually increases. The style of the novel is closely related to the growth of the characters and the theme of each stage.
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4

GULLESTAD, MARIANNE. "Sharon Stephens." Childhood 9, no. 1 (February 2002): 133–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0907568202009001009.

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5

Gemme, Paola. "Rewriting the Indian Tale: Science, Politics, and the Evolution of Ann S. Stephens's Indian Romances." Prospects 19 (October 1994): 375–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0361233300005159.

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On June 9, 1860, the publishing firm of Irving P. Beadle and Company announced in the New York Daily Tribune the publication of their first dime novel, Ann S. Stephens's Malaeska: The Indian Wife of the White Hunter. The narrative was advertised as “the best story of the day,” and its writer as “the star of American authors.” Stephens, whose name is familiar today only to scholars of the dime novel, was indeed well known to the reading public around the mid-19th Century. She was on the editorial board of several magazines, including the illustrious Graham's Magazine. She had published her own journal, Mrs. Stephens Illustrated New Monthly. And she wrote for a plethora of popular magazines, among others the Columbian Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine, the Ladies' Wreath, Frank Leslie's Ladies' Gazette of Fashion, and Peterson's Magazine. Her 1854 urban melodrama Fashion and Famine had to be printed three times during the first month of publication to satisfy the demand of the public, and eventlually sold a record eighty thousand copies. Her historical novels, generally of European setting, were so successful that they were systematically printed in book form by the Philadelphia publisher T. B. Peterson after they had appeared serially in Charles J. Peterson's literary monthly. And Stephens had the sanction of the critics as well as the public: already in 1848 the American Literary Magazine had eulogized her by stating that “of the numerous female writers of our country, Mrs. Stephens is deservedly classed among the first.” Charles J. Peterson had declared in the pages of Graham's Magazine that “no writer, since Sir Walter Scott, had excelled her in … power of description.” And even Edgar Allan Poe had acknowledged that Stephens could “seize adroitly on salient incidents and present them with vividness to the eye,” was “not unskillful in delineation of character,” and could, in conclusion, be granted “the effervescence of high talent, if not exactly of genius.”
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6

Anderson, R. S., and A. T. Howden. "TYCHIUS MELILOTI STEPHENS NEW TO CANADA WITH A BRIEF REVIEW OF THE SPECIES OF TYCHIUS GERMAR INTRODUCED INTO NORTH AMERICA (COLEOPTERA: CURCULIONIDAE)." Canadian Entomologist 126, no. 6 (December 1994): 1363–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.4039/ent1261363-6.

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AbstractFour species of Tychius have been introduced into North America from Europe: Tychius picirostris (Fabricius) (host plants: Trifolium spp.), widespread in North America; T. cuprifer (Panzer) (host plants: Trifolium spp., Teline monspessulana L.), known only from Maryland, USA; T. meliloti Stephens, new North American record (host plants: Melilotus spp.), known from scattered localities in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec, Canada; and T. stephensi Schoenherr (host plants: Trifolium spp.), widespread in North America. Keys to separate the species are presented.
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7

Brock, Rachel E., and Douglas A. Kelt. "Keystone effects of the endangered Stephens' kangaroo rat (Dipodomys stephensi)." Biological Conservation 116, no. 1 (March 2004): 131–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0006-3207(03)00184-8.

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8

Gores, Steven. "James Stephens and his American Patron." Irish University Review 52, no. 2 (November 2022): 266–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/iur.2022.0567.

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James Stephens (1880–1950) had a significant reputation during the interwar years, both as a poet and a writer of short stories. Combining a Revivalist interest in imaginative texts from Ireland’s past, with an instinct for social realism, Stephens created a distinctive and admired body of work and was the subject of significant critical attention in the decades following his death. This essay explores a little-known dimension of Stephens’ life and professional career – his relationship with his American patron, W. T. H. Howe (1868–1939). Howe was a supportive presence in Stephens’ life, hosting him at his home, ‘Freelands’, for extended periods and collaborating with him on a number of publishing projects. Using a range of archival sources, this essay considers the place of this relationship in Stephens’ career and the factors which led to its conclusion.
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9

Orousset, Jean. "Les Eutheiini de la faune de France. II. Le genre Eutheia Stephens, 1830 (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Scydmaeninae)." Bulletin de la Société entomologique de France 126, no. 4 (December 7, 2021): 475–508. http://dx.doi.org/10.32475/bsef_2206.

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Eutheiini of the French fauna. II. The genus Eutheia Stephens, 1830 (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Scydmaeninae). A synthesis of the data about morphology, taxonomy, ecology, biology and chorology of the French species belonging to the genus Eutheia Stephens, 1830 (Eutheiini) is presented. Lectotypes are designated for E. clavata Reitter, 1882 and E. minutissima Sainte-Claire Deville, 1901. Two new synonymies are proposed: E. scydmaenoides orientalis Franz, 1971, n. syn. for E. scydmaenoides Stephens, 1830, and E. scydmaenoides tyrolensis Franz, 1971, n. syn. for E. scydmaenoides Stephens, 1830. Eutheia formicetorum Reitter, 1882, is new for Algeria, Bulgaria, Morocco and Tunisia; E. plicata (Gyllenhal, 1813) is new for Slovenia; E. parallela Fairmaire, 1879, is new for Greece (Rhodes).
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10

Landers, Shane. "Peffer v. Stephens." Texas A&M Law Review 7, no. 3 (May 2020): 647–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.37419/lr.v7.i3.5.

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The Fourth Amendment provides for the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures. Search warrants may only be issued upon a finding of probable cause. This core tenet of our constitutional republic becomes progressively flexible with every development in Fourth Amendment interpretation. In Peffer v. Stephens, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit delivered the latest blow to constitutional rights that restrict the State from engaging in unprincipled searches. In an issue of first impression, the Sixth Circuit held that a criminal defendant’s alleged use of a computer during the commission of a crime was adequate probable cause to justify a search of the defendant’s home and a seizure of the technological equipment inside. Such a shortsighted justification fails to consider technological innovation, economic policy, and historical civil liberties. Peffer v. Stephens is the latest proof of the parasitic relationship between the law and technological advancement. As technology evolves, the law struggles to keep pace and resultingly impedes economic development. With the exponential growth of technology in the 21st century, a visionary approach to search and seizure law is necessary to promote economic innovation and to refrain from further dismantling Fourth Amendment protections.
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Hewitt-Cooper, Nigel. "Drosera regia Stephens." Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 41, no. 3 (September 1, 2012): 109–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.55360/cpn413.nh647.

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Much has been written about this interesting species of sundew over the years, both in the popular literature and indeed on-line in more recent times. Much of what is written would serve to discourage the average hobbyist from attempting cultivation, and as a result until surprisingly recently Drosera regia was scarcely seen. The truth however, is that this plant is generally easy to grow successfully, and once established is a long lived perennial which can attain huge dimensions.
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Stephens, Claire. "Interview: Claire Stephens." British Journal of Community Nursing 17, Sup6 (June 2012): S32—S33. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjcn.2012.17.sup6.s32.

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13

Bryden, G. "John Stephens Bryden." BMJ 346, jan09 2 (January 9, 2013): e8058-e8058. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.e8058.

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Gullestad, Marianne. "Sharon Stephens - Bibliography." Childhood 9, no. 1 (February 1, 2002): 133–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0907568202009001241.

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Stephens, D. "Frederick Peter Stephens." BMJ 339, no. 16 2 (November 16, 2009): b4857. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.b4857.

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16

Irwin, Mary. "Doreen Stephens: Producing and Managing British Television in the 1950s and 1960s." Journal of British Cinema and Television 10, no. 3 (July 2013): 618–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2013.0161.

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Doreen Stephens, whose work and career are now largely forgotten, was very active in the production and management of British television during the 1950s and 1960s. This article will consolidate the author's earlier work on Stephens’ central role in the successful expansion of postwar women's television at the BBC. It will chronicle and explore Stephens’ involvement in other significant episodes at the BBC as well as her subsequent appointment in 1967 as London Weekend Television's Head of Children's Religious and Adult Educational Programmes. Such work continues the process of rewriting and repositioning Stephens into existing narratives of television history and demonstrates that the exploration of women's careers in television allows us to establish critical histories of women's professional expertise in television production and management.
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17

van Berge Henegouwen, Arno. "Revision of the European species of Anacaena Thomson (Coleoptera: Hydrophilidae)." Insect Systematics & Evolution 17, no. 3 (1986): 393–407. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187631286x00305.

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AbstractThe European species of Anacaena Thomson are examined. Five species are recognised: A. bipustulata (Marsham), A. globulus (Paykull), A. limbata (Fabricius), A. lutescens (Stephens) and A. rufipes (Guilleheau). It is shown that rufipes and lulescens are distinct species, and not a var. of globulus and a synonym of limbala respectively. The species are keyed and redescribed. Synonymy is given on the basis of examination of type-material. Lectotypes are designated for Anacaena carinata Thomson, 1870, A. immatura Abeille de Perrin, 1901, A. globula var. nitidior Kuwert, 1890, A. variabilis Sharp, 1870, Brachypalpus ambiguus Rey, 1885, Laccobius marshami Stephens, 1839, Hydrophilus bipustulatus Marsham, 1802, Hydrobius foveolatus Stephens, 1829, H. lutescens Stephens, 1829, H. ochraceus Stephens, 1829, Sphaeridium limbalum Fabricius, 1792, and Philydrus nitidus Heer, 1841. Anacaena immalura, A. variabilis, Brachypalpus ambiguus, Laccobius marshami, Hydrobius lutescens var. ß sordens and Philydrus nitidus are placed in synonymy with A. lutescens. A. globulus glabricollis d'Orchymont, 1940 (nec Schaufuss) and A. jordanensis Burmeister, 1985 are placed in synonymy with A. rufipes. Distributional records and data on habitat are given.
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Chiasson, Basil. "Simon Stephens, Birdland, and a Few Affects of Neoliberalization." Journal of Contemporary Drama in English 6, no. 2 (November 7, 2018): 331–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jcde-2018-0029.

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Abstract This article explores the ways theatre might inspire a critique of what is arguably most pressing about contemporary neoliberalization—its operation at the level of subjectivity to reform society. The focus in this is Simon Stephens and his play Birdland (2014). Working from extant scholarship that connects Stephens’s work to neoliberalism, the article locates the playwright and his work in relation to a specific history of neoliberalization in Britain and argues that Birdland is a timely political drama because it hones in on certain features and affects of neoliberalization, doing so in ways that open a space for engaging critically with key problems engendered by contemporary capitalism.
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Kim, Dongno. "Capitalist Development and Democracy.Dietrich Rueschemeyer , Evelyne Huber Stephens , John D. Stephens." American Journal of Sociology 100, no. 1 (July 1994): 267–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/230517.

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Stephens, Diane. "Of Magic Doors There Is This…." Research in the Teaching of English 35, no. 3 (February 1, 2001): 292–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.58680/rte20011722.

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Diane Stephens prepared the following talk for the 2000 NCTE Conference in Milwaukee upon receiving the Alan C. Purves Award, presented to the RTE article from the previous year’s volume judged most likely to have an impact on the practice of others. In her talk Stephens considers the doubts she has had about the design of the award winning study, focusing especially on a researcher’s obligation to help the teachers with whom the researcher is working, even at the risk of jeopardizing a study’s design. Stephens traces the way that her engagement with that question has led to her current professional commitments.
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Saha, Agnik, Shah Masud Hayder, Sonalina Mudi, and Pankaj Halder. "Management strategy for high inguinal testis in a 9-year-old child: A case report." Amrita Journal of Medicine 20, no. 2 (April 2024): 75–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/amjm.amjm_75_23.

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Abstract The high inguinal undescended testis is a unique clinical entity necessitating additional surgical procedures. Since the testis cannot be implanted in the scrotal sac due to the short testicular artery, transection of the artery (Fowler and Stephens procedure) is a viable alternative. The Fowler and Stephens procedure, either one- or two-stage, has remarkably good success rates, up to 80% for one-stage and 85% for two-stage. We present a 9-year-old child with high inguinal testis who underwent a one-stage open Fowler and Stephens orchiopexy to bring the testis into the scrotum.
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Košťál, Michael, and Roberto Caldara. "A Taxonomic Revision of the Genus Cleopus Dejean, 1821 (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), with Descriptions of 13 New Species." Insects 15, no. 6 (June 7, 2024): 434. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects15060434.

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The genus Cleopus Dejean, 1821 is herein revised for the first time. Based on adult morphological characteristics, 18 species are recognized as valid. Thirteen species, all distributed in the Eastern Palaearctis or Oriental region, are described as new: C. aduncirostris sp. n.; C. cognatus sp. n.; C. confusus sp. n.; C. dohertyi sp. n.; C. hajeki sp. n.; C. lirenae sp. n.; C. longitarsis sp. n.; C. minutus sp. n.; C. pallidisquamosus sp. n.; C. parvidentatus sp. n.; C. philippinensis sp. n.; C. simillimus sp. n.; and C. subaequalis sp. n. Lectotypes of following two valid species and three synonyms were designated: Curculio solani Fabricius, 1792; Curculio pulchellus Herbst, 1795; Cionus setiger Germar, 1821; Curculio immunis Marsham, 1802; and Cleopus pulchellus rigidus Stephens, 1831. Neotypes of Curculio perpensus Rossi, 1792 and Cleopus pulchellus flavus Stephens, 1832 were designated. The following new synonyms of Cleopus pulchellus (Herbst, 1795) were established: Cleopus pulchellus var. flavus Stephens, 1831 syn. n. and C. pulchellus var. rigidus Stephens, 1831 syn. n.
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Bull, John. "Add-Aptation: Simon Stephens, Carrie Cracknell and Katie Mitchell’s ‘Dialogues’ with the Classic Canon." Journal of Contemporary Drama in English 6, no. 2 (November 7, 2018): 280–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jcde-2018-0026.

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AbstractAddition and Add-Aptation This article discusses, in particular, the playwright Simon Stephens’s “English Language versions” of Ibsen’s A Doll’s House and Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard in the context of the long and tangled history of translation and adaptation. Key differences from the conventional claim to be attempting some kind of fidelity to the original in Stephens’s approach to the task of creating a new text are considered: an approach which largely adheres to the overall narrative structure of the original but feels free to play with, in particular, the dialogue. This approach is then contrasted with the act of ‘appropriation’ of an existing text: whilst the act of appropriation results in the creation of an independent play that exists alongside the original, although Stephens actively disrupts expectations of fidelity, his version is still offered as a play by Ibsen or Chekhov. The process is further problematized by the directorial interventions of Carrie Cracknell and Katie Mitchell, working independently and in collaboration with Stephens on their productions of A Doll’s House and The Cherry Orchard respectively. I have labelled this process Add-Aptation, to distinguish it from both adaptation per se and appropriation. In an add-apted text the additions are both deliberate and significant Not the least significant factor in this process is that both directors are women, as is increasingly likely to be the case in the world of contemporary theatre.
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Stephens, Ifan Erfyl Lester. "(Invited) Correlative Spectroscopy to Elucidate the Factors Controlling the Kinetics of Oxygen Evolution." ECS Meeting Abstracts MA2023-01, no. 47 (August 28, 2023): 2513. http://dx.doi.org/10.1149/ma2023-01472513mtgabs.

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It is particularly challenging to catalyse oxygen evolution under the acidic conditions of polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) electrolysers. All compounds, apart from IrOx and RuO x , are catalytically inactive or unstable. In alkaline electrolysers, a wider range of materials are available, including non precious metal oxides based on Co and Ni. Herein, I will discuss our recent mechanistic studies on model oxygen evolution catalysts, including RuOx, IrOx, doped CoOxHy and NiOxHy.1-6 I will correlate operando spectroscopy to X-ray absorption spectroscopy, to reveal the factors controlling the factors controlling the kinetics for water oxidation. Density functional theory measurements provide a molecular scale explanation for the observed phenomena. 1 Rao, R. R., Corby, S., Bucci, A., Garcia-Tecedor, M., Mesa, C. A., Rossmeisl, J., Gimenez, S., Lloret-Fillol, J., Stephens, I. E. L. & Durrant, J. R. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 144, 7622, (2022). 2 Bozal-Ginesta, C., Rao, R. R., Mesa, C. A., Wang, Y. X., Zhao, Y. Y., Hu, G. F., Anton-Garcia, D., Stephens, I. E. L., Reisner, E., Brudvig, G. W., Wang, D. W. & Durrant, J. R. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 144, 8454, (2022). 3 Rao, R. R., Stephens, I. E. L. & Durrant, J. R. Joule 5, 16, (2021). 4 Bozal-Ginesta, C., Rao, R. R., Mesa, C. A., Xinyi, L., Hillman, S. A. J., Stephens, I. E. L. & Durrant, J. R. ACS Catalysis , (2021). 5 Rao, R. R., Kolb, M. J., Giordano, L., Pedersen, A. F., Katayama, Y., Hwang, J., Mehta, A., You, H., Lunger, J. R., Zhou, H., Halck, N. B., Vegge, T., Chorkendorff, I., Stephens, I. E. L. & Shao-Horn, Y. Nature Catalysis 3, 516, (2020). 6 Roy, C., Rao, R. R., Stoerzinger, K. A., Hwang, J., Rossmeisl, J., Chorkendorff, I., Shao-Horn, Y. & Stephens, I. E. L. Acs Energy Letters 3, 2045, (2018).
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Picard, Lucie. "Nathalie Stephens, Je Nathanaël." Studi Francesi, no. 144 (XLVIII | III) (December 15, 2004): 664. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/studifrancesi.38483.

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Motose, Kaoru. "The example by Stephens." Proceedings of the Japan Academy, Series A, Mathematical Sciences 88, no. 3 (March 2012): 35–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.3792/pjaa.88.35.

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Stephens, Peter W., and Alan I. Goldman. "Stephens and Goldman Respond." Physical Review Letters 57, no. 21 (November 24, 1986): 2770. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.57.2770.

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Stephens, Britton. "Interview with Britton Stephens." Carbon Management 5, no. 2 (March 4, 2014): 109–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17583004.2014.912824.

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Bauer, Dale M. "Seriality and Ann Stephens." J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists 1, no. 1 (2013): 28–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jnc.2013.0010.

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Luxon, L. M. "Simon Dafydd Glyn Stephens." BMJ 345, oct31 1 (October 31, 2012): e6491-e6491. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.e6491.

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Stephens, Beth. "Remarks by Beth Stephens." Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 113 (2019): 166–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/amp.2019.169.

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Mechanisms to hold corporations liable for human rights abuses are usually grossly inadequate. All too often, local remedies are not available because the host government and legal system are inadequate or captured by corporate interests. The subsidiary directly responsible for the abuses may not have the funds to provide an adequate remedy, and the parent corporation may not be subject to the jurisdiction of local courts. As a result, victims and survivors of abuses have attempted to follow corporate actors to their home states, through human rights litigation in U.S. and European courts. Although such litigation flourished in U.S. courts for two decades, recent Supreme Court decisions have slashed the number of U.S. human rights cases.
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Stephens, Beth. "Remarks by Beth Stephens." Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 94 (2000): 317–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0272503700056251.

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Stephens, Beth. "Remarks by Beth Stephens." Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 98 (2004): 51–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0272503700060778.

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34

Ein, Sigmund H., William K. Lindsay, and Barry Shandling. "Dr Clinton A. Stephens." Journal of Pediatric Surgery 25, no. 11 (November 1990): 1210. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-3468(90)90805-j.

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35

Millar, Wayne J., and Thomas Stephens. "Millar and Stephens Respond." American Journal of Public Health 77, no. 7 (July 1987): 878. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.77.7.878.

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36

Bornet, Philippe. "Father Thomas Stephens’ Kristapurāṇa." Exchange 46, no. 1 (January 27, 2017): 73–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1572543x-12341416.

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Sullivan-González, Douglass. "“A Chosen People”: Religious Discourse and the Making of the Republic of Guatemala, 1821-1871." Americas 54, no. 1 (July 1997): 17–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1007501.

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No clearer testimony evidenced the social upheaval and shifting political landscape in Guatemala in February 1838 than the graphic narrative by the traveling United States' diplomat, John Lloyd Stephens. Recently arrived in the capital for the first time, Stephens witnessed the insurrectionary triumph of the military caudillo, Rafael Carrera, and his “tumultuous mass of half-naked savages, men, women, and children, estimated at ten or twelve thousand.” Stephens described how Carrera's indigenous followers, upon entering the abandoned plaza and within earshot of the terrified white elite shouted “Long live religion and death to foreigners!” Carrera's political uprising incited by religious concerns had laid siege to the power structure inherited from colonial times.
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George, Annie Rachel, and Arnapurna Rath. "“Musk among Perfumes”." Church History and Religious Culture 96, no. 3 (2016): 304–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18712428-09603003.

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The complexities of scriptural translation intensify in colonial, multilingual societies. In this study, we examine Thomas Stephens’s Kristapurana (1616) as a significant moment of cross-cultural encounters in the history of Bible translation in India. Stephens (1549–1619) was an English Jesuit, who worked in Goa, India. The Kristapurana is written in the Marathi language, in Roman script. Stephens’s Purana can be considered the first attempt to bring the biblical story into an Indian language, although in poetic form. This study aims to bring out the significance of this early Christian work in the Marathi language by analyzing Stephens’s translation of the biblical story into Marathi. The Kristapurana is studied as a site where Christianity and indigenous Hindu practices come together to form a “creative” expression of Christianity strongly reminiscent of the region that it was produced in.
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Pandher, Manpreet, and Malkiat Saini. "Three new species of the genus Chimarra Stephens, 1829 (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae) from the Indian Himalayas." Polish Journal of Entomology / Polskie Pismo Entomologiczne 81, no. 1 (March 1, 2012): 63–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10200-011-0065-5.

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Three new species of the genus Chimarra Stephens, 1829 (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae) from the Indian Himalayas Three new species are described in the genus Chimarra Stephens. They are Chimarra icar, C. pupi (both from Sikkim) and C. maneriensis from Uttarakhand. These species are distinguishable from each other and from previously known species by the structure of the male genitalia.
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Price, M. V., P. A. Kelly, and R. L. Goldingay. "Distances Moved by Stephens' Kangaroo Rat (Dipodomys stephensi Merriam) and Implications for Conservation." Journal of Mammalogy 75, no. 4 (November 18, 1994): 929–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1382474.

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Bosque-Pérez, Nilsa A., and Dennis J. Schotzko. "Wheat Genotype, Early Plant Growth Stage and Infestation Density Effects on Russian Wheat Aphid (Homoptera: Aphididae) Population Increase and Plant Damage." Journal of Entomological Science 35, no. 1 (January 1, 2000): 22–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.18474/0749-8004-35.1.22.

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Population increase of the Russian wheat aphid, Diuraphis noxia (Mordvilko) (Homoptera: Aphididae), and its effect on early plant growth and damage were studied under laboratory conditions on two winter wheat genotypes, susceptible ‘Stephens’ and resistant 10085-5. Three early plant growth stages (one-, two-, and three-leaf stage), and three insect densities (0, 5 and 20 aphids per plant) were compared. Insect counts, plant damage assessments, plant height, leaf number and dry weight measurements were made. Diuraphis noxia population increase was greater on ‘Stephens’ than on 10085-5, but this was highly influenced by plant growth stage at time of infestation and initial aphid density. Host quality of ‘Stephens’ decreased rapidly when plants were infested at the 1 -left stage, especially with the high initial density (20 aphids), resulting in low aphid population increase. For all plant developmental stages and genotypes, D. noxia per capita population increase was lower at initial densities of 20 compared to 5 aphids per plant, probably due to a density-dependent reduction in reproductive rate associated with a reduction in host-plant quality and/or crowding. Diuraphis noxia significantly affected plant growth, but the magnitude of the effect was influenced by genotype. In general, susceptible ‘Stephens’ had significantly more damage and a greater reduction in growth than resistant 10085-5.
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DE MAUS, MARIANA CHANI-POSSE. "Revision of some types of Philonthus Stephens and Gabrius Stephens from southern South America (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae), with nomenclatural notes." Zootaxa 2034, no. 1 (March 13, 2009): 31–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2034.1.2.

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Based on my revision of types of southern South American species of Philonthus Stephens, 1829 and Gabrius Stephens, 1829 some nomenclatural changes are proposed. Five species of Philonthus are transferred to Gabrius resulting in the following new combinations: G. argentinus (Bernhauer, 1912), G. hornaditanus (Rambousek, 1925), G. jujuyensis (Bernhauer, 1921), G. nidicola (Bernhauer, 1921) and G. tucumanensis (Bernhauer, 1927). Philonthus hosmanni Bernhauer, 1912 is transferred to Heterothops Stephens, 1829 (Quediina). Five new synonymies within the genus Philonthus are proposed: P. tenebrosus Boheman, 1858 with P. quadraticeps Boheman, 1858 (valid name); P. catamarcanus Bernhauer, 1916 and P. weiseri Bernhauer, 1921 with P. bonariensis Bernhauer, 1909; P. emelinae Coiffait & Sáiz, 1968 with P. discoideus (Gravenhorst, 1802); Philonthus catamarcanus var. densior Bernhauer, 1916 with P. cribriventris Bernhauer, 1912. One old synonym is confirmed: P. perplexus Fairmaire & Germain, 1861 with P. longicornis Stephens, 1832. One new synonymy within the genus Gabrius is proposed: G. chiliensis Coiffait & Sáiz, 1968 with G. nigritulus (Gravenhorst, 1802). Lectotypes are designated for P. argentinus Bernhauer, 1912, P. bonariensis Bernhauer, 1909, P. catamarcanus Bernhauer, 1916, P. cribriventris Bernhauer, 1912, P. hornaditanus Rambousek, 1925, P. jujuyensis Bernhauer, 1921, P. nidicola Bernhauer, 1921, P. perplexus Fairmaire & Germain, 1861, P. quadraticeps Boheman, 1858, P. tenebrosus Boheman, 1858, P. tucumanensis Bernhauer, 1927 and P. weiseri Bernhauer, 1921.
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Manchaiah, Vinaya K. C., and Fei Zhao. "Professor Dafydd Stephens 1942–2012." International Journal of Audiology 51, no. 10 (September 3, 2012): 714. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/14992027.2012.712722.

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Cox, Fiona. "Victor Hugo by Bradley Stephens." Modern Language Review 115, no. 2 (2020): 471–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mlr.2020.0115.

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Houston, Johnny L. "Clarence F. Stephens (1917–2018)." Notices of the American Mathematical Society 65, no. 07 (August 1, 2018): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/noti1703.

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Svich, Caridad. "Simon Stephens: A Working Diary." Contemporary Theatre Review 27, no. 4 (October 2, 2017): 530–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10486801.2017.1379680.

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Lockhart, Richard. "Michael Arthur Stephens, 1927–2019." Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society) 182, no. 4 (October 2019): 1634–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rssa.12515.

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48

Edwards, M. S. "Joseph Rayner Stephens (1805-1879)." Expository Times 104, no. 5 (February 1993): 136–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001452469310400503.

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Arner, Anders. "Smooth Muscle Contraction.Newman L. Stephens." Quarterly Review of Biology 60, no. 3 (September 1985): 371–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/414503.

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Caldamone, Anthony A. "Frank Douglas Stephens (1913–2011)." Journal of Pediatric Urology 8, no. 3 (June 2012): 224–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpurol.2012.04.002.

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