Academic literature on the topic 'Use of Salisbury'

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Journal articles on the topic "Use of Salisbury"

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von Moos, Peter. "The use ofexemplain thePolicraticusof John of Salisbury." Studies in Church History. Subsidia 3 (1994): 207–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s014304590000332x.

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In 1165 the deanery of Salisbury was the object of royal jobbery. A long dispute followed in which John tried to mediate by means of several letters. In one of them he wrote: ‘If my advice is asked… I reply that in all cases of stubborn doubt one should act as follows: First let us enquire and follow the prescriptions of Divine Law on the matter; if this gives no certain solution, one should go back to the canons and (then) to the examples of the saints; if nothing certain is to be found there, one should finally investigate the mind and counsel of men wise in the fear of the Lord …’. In this enumeration of means to enlighten problems of practical life, theexempla sanctorumare placed along with the authorities of the Bible and of Canon Law, although ranking lower than these precepts. They complement the abstract rules by concrete comparison, like legal precedents they were meant to explain special cases or fill gaps in the law.
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Lack, Alastair, Rhiannon Tudor Edwards, and Angela Boland. "Weights for Waits: Lessons from Salisbury." Journal of Health Services Research & Policy 5, no. 2 (April 2000): 83–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/135581960000500205.

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Objectives: This paper describes a waiting list patients' points scheme under development in Salisbury, UK, for the fair management of elective inpatient and day case waiting lists. The paper illustrates how points can be assigned to patients on a waiting list to indicate their relative unmet need, and illustrates the impact on case mix and resource use of the implementations of the points system versus ‘first come, first served’. The paper explores a range of philosophical and technical questions raised by the points system. Methods: The Salisbury Priority Scoring System enables surgeons to assign relative priority to patients at the time they are placed on a waiting list for elective health care. Points are assigned to patients to reflect the rate of progress of their disease, pain or distress, disability or dependence on others, loss of usual occupation and time already waited. In recognition of the need for resource planning alongside the prioritisation of elective inpatients and day case waiting lists, a range of iso-resource groups has been developed for all procedures on these lists. These categorise procedures in terms of their resource use (i.e. bed days and theatre time required). Results: In a modelling exercise, application of the Salisbury Points Scheme to a ‘first come, first served' orthopaedic waiting list produced considerable changes in the order of patients to be treated. Only seven patients appeared in the first 20 patients to be treated under both regimes. The Salisbury Scheme required fewer resources to treat its first 20 patients than ‘first come, first served' and met more Salisbury-defined ‘need’;, but eliminated fewer days of waiting from the list. Conclusions: Development of a points scheme and iso-resource groupings opens up opportunities for more sophisticated purchasing, based on treating patients in order of unmet need rather than according to arbitrary maximum waiting time guarantees, as has been the dominant policy on waiting lists pursued in the UK, Australia, and Sweden, to date. However, such schemes raise three issues: first, the necessity of defining need as a composite of clinical and social factors; second the necessity to determine the acceptability of explicit prioritisation to both health care professionals and patients; third, the thorny issue of whether such prioritisation schemes will lead to ‘gaming’ by well-meaning general practitioners and specialists, aiming to secure the priority of their own patients and clinical specialty. Rigorous piloting of schemes, such as that developed at Salisbury, will be required to identify their dynamic effect over time on case mix, waiting time and resource use.
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Woods, Isobel. "‘Our Awin Scottis Use’: Chant Usage in Medieval Scotland." Journal of the Royal Musical Association 112, no. 1 (1987): 21–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrma/112.1.21.

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In September 1507, James IV of Scotland issued a licence to the Edinburgh printers Chepman and Millar to produce, among other books, mass books, manuals, matin books and breviaries ‘efter our awin Scottis use’. This same licence (see Appendix 1) prescribes that these new books be used throughout Scotland and that all imports according to Salisbury use be banned. This Scottish use, therefore, was considered to be a separate entity – but what was it?
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Lewis, Stephen. "Salisbury, Novichok and International Law on the Use of Force." RUSI Journal 163, no. 4 (July 4, 2018): 10–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03071847.2018.1529889.

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Tatton-Brown, Tim. "Building the tower and spire of Salisbury Cathedral." Antiquity 65, no. 246 (March 1991): 74–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x0007931x.

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Although - or because - the 19th century saw great archaeological interest in the standing buildings of medieval England, the early legislation to protect British ancient monuments expressly excluded church buildings that were still in use. A new measure, just come into force, gives cathedral archaeology a formal place, and makes this a timely moment to see what kind of work which the archaeology of a standing cathedral can now amount to.
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Beach, Stephen, Bob Clarke, and Lorraine A. Mepham. "A Multi-Phase 20th-Century Military Landscape Near Shipton Bellinger, Salisbury Plain." Hampshire Studies 75, no. 1 (November 1, 2020): 140–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.24202/hs2020009.

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The investigation of a World War I (WWI) practice trench system on Salisbury Plain has revealed a wealth of detail about the construction and use of this military landscape. The archaeological works has also led to the recognition of at least three later periods of activity on the site, all connected with aspects of conflict, including World War II (WWII) and the Korean War. Finds comprising a mixture of issued equipment and personal objects from the excavations provide evidence of the conditions experienced by personnel while in training on Salisbury Plain. A particularly interesting find is a copper alloy cane finial marked O. T. C. (Officer Training Corps) and embellished with the coat of arms of William of Wykeham, the founder of Winchester College. The examination of aerial photographs further complements the excavation results available, allowing for the construction of a complex narrative for this corner of Hampshire.
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ERST, ANDREY S., EUGENY V. BOLTENKOV, and WEI WANG. "Typification of the name Eranthis sibirica (Ranunculaceae)." Phytotaxa 437, no. 3 (March 26, 2020): 161–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.437.3.5.

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A revision of Eranthis Salisbury (1807: 303) in Siberia as part of the preliminary study revealed that the name E. sibirica Candolle (1817: 315) had not yet been typified. The present lectotypification is made with the explicit purpose to stabilize the use of the name in the sense it has been used before and is being used now.
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Vanderzalm, Joanne, Bruce Naumann, Simon Higginson, Declan Page, Andrew Jones, Vanessa Moscovis, Stacey Hamilton, et al. "Australian exemplars of sustainable and economic managed aquifer recharge." Water e-Journal 5, no. 4 (2021): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.21139/wej.2020.024.

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Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) can improve water security by using aquifers to store water when it is abundant until required for future use and can increase the use of urban stormwater and treated wastewater to reduce the demand on traditional surface water and groundwater supplies. Recently, two Australian examples were showcased internationally as sustainable and economic MAR: Perth’s groundwater replenishment scheme (GWRS) with recycled water to increase security of urban water supply and a multi-site urban stormwater MAR scheme for suburban non-potable water supply in Salisbury, Adelaide. This paper provides a synopsis of these Australian exemplars of sustainable and economic MAR.
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Orzolek, Michael D., and Robert A. Scott. "USE OF FOAM IN STAND ESTABLISHMENT." HortScience 25, no. 9 (September 1990): 1098e—1098. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.25.9.1098e.

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The concept of using Foam in agriculture is not new. Researchcrs at LSU in 1972 recommended Foam be used for; a carrier for insecticides and pesticides, frost protection agent, short-life mulch, evaporation suppressant and soil cover for fumigation. In 1974, Johnson Manufacturing Co., Pendleton, ND tested a light weight, low solids Foam as a frost protectant material on strawberries at the University of Maryland Research Farm, Salisbury, MD. Unfortunately, the Foam dissipated within 8 hours and was difficult to apply when winds were greater than 5 mph. In addition, equipment had not been developed to utilize the Foam technology in a field situation. In 1986, anew generation of Foam technology had been developed by Aqualon, Inc. and was initially tested in the spring of 1987 on several vegetable crops at the Horticulture Research Farm, Rock Springs, PA. The Foam was applied with a modified high pressure sprayer and banded over the seeded rows at a width of 10 cm and height of either 5 or 10 cm. Compared to bare-ground checks, there was no soil capping when the Foam was applied to carrots, beets, snap bean, broccoli, cucumber, lettuce and spinach. Generally, seeds emerged earlier and more uniform with the Foam treatments than the bare-ground checks. In addition, higher soil temperatures and moisture levels were observed under the Foam treatment. In the last 2 years, a prototype Foam Applicator was developed by Smucker Manufacturing, Harrisburg, Oregon.
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Payne, Ian. "The Will and Probate Inventory of John Holmes (d 1629): Instrumental Music at Salisbury and Winchester Cathedrals Revisited." Antiquaries Journal 83 (September 2003): 369–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500077738.

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The recent discovery of probate material relating to John Holmes (d 1629), a provincial Jacobean cathedral organist and composer, provides three valuable references to the use of musical instruments at Salisbury Cathedral before the Civil War. These prove that the Choristers' House, where Holmes lived, contained in 1629 a consort of viols, with other (unspecified) instruments, four virginals and an organ. This evidence, though fragmentary and circumstantial, may be read in the context of what is known about the practice of instrumental music in other English cathedrals. The references can then be used to support three generally accepted theses: first, that viols were used for teaching purposes (and possibly also in a flourishing adult musical circle centred on Salisbury Cathedral, for which there is strong circumstantial evidence), rather than in liturgical contexts; second, that sackbutts and cornetts most probably doubled the voices in the choir; and third, that the organ remained the principal instrument of choral accompaniment even in the first decade of the Restoration period. Holmes had previously served as organist and master of the choristers at Winchester Cathedral, where there is also circumstantial evidence of viol-teaching activity since 1618, where wind instruments were employed (probably liturgically) in the sixteenth century, and where Holmes may have composed at least one piece of instrumental consort music, most probably for teaching purposes.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Use of Salisbury"

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Della-Sera, Margarita Esther. "Investigation into the use of active frequency selective surfaces to extend the absorption bandwidth of a conventional Salisbury screen absorber." Thesis, University of Hull, 2002. http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:5498.

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It is well accepted that the absorption bandwidth of a metal back-plane absorber, built with either dielectric or magnetic materials, is inherently narrow. It is also well known that in order to increase the absorption bandwidth, the absorber thickness must be increased through decreasing the permittivity or permeability of its spacer. This improved performance, however, comes at a cost. The absorption bandwidth is increased at the expense of not only an increase of absorber thickness, specially at lower frequencies, but also the yielding of a mechanically weaker structure. The most important implication of the former is that there is a tradeoff between absorber thickness and absorption bandwidth. These two conflicting absorber properties are, however, of equal importance since the optimum absorber is one which has a small thickness as well as a wideband absorption response. This inherent trade-off is due to the fundamental frequency limitations imposed by the constitutive parameters of materials and is more detrimental at microwave frequencies. The aim of the research programme described in this thesis was thus to investigate the use of adaptive complex impedance structures, in the form of active frequency selective surfaces (AFSSs), to extend the absorption bandwidth of a small thickness Salisbury screen absorber, thus addressing directly the aforementioned by minimizing the trade-off that exists between absorber thickness and absorption bandwidth.
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Joseph, James R. "Sarum Use and Disuse: A Study in Social and Liturgical History." University of Dayton / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=dayton1470048407.

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Hartsfield, Byron J. "Marriage, sin and the community in the Register of John Chandler, Dean of Salisbury 1404-17." [Tampa, Fla.] : University of South Florida, 2007. http://purl.fcla.edu/usf/dc/et/SFE0002210.

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Moreau, Lauren Angelina. "Preaching the Policraticus : The re-use of John of Salisbury's Policraticus in selected sermons produced in England during the later Middle Ages." Thesis, University of Leeds, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.590157.

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This thesis investigates the re-use of John of Salisbury's Policraticus in sermons produced in England during the later Middle Ages through examining the transmission of the Policraticus, the types of quotations reused and the nature of Policraticus' authority. A transmission history of the Policraticus is given in order to pinpoint the most likely ways in which later medieval sermon writers could have accessed the text. The re-use of the Poficraticus in several influential florilegia and chronicles, alongside excerpt editions, emerge as the more accessible forms of the Poficraticus during this time. Chapter two develops an original typology of source re-use that assists in negotiating the difficult boundaries of the nature of authority in sermons. Chapters 3, 4, 5 and 6 discuss the sermons of William Herebert, Thomas Brinton, four macaronic sermons from Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Bodley 649, three Middle English sermons from Worcester, Cathedral Library, MS F.10 and the 'Procession' sermon from London, British Library, MS Harley 2268. The case studies offer close lexical analysis of each example of re-use of the Policraticus in sermons. Each case study also suggests the ways in which the specific sermon writers could have accessed the Policraticus. Finally, each sermon writers' use of sources is compared to the use of the Policraticus and assesses the extent to which John and his book function as authorities in these texts. The thesis concludes that most sermon writers would have known the Poficraticus only in excerpt form, through the mediation of compilers or excerpt copies of the text. The Policraticus, when cited in the sermons, functions authoritatively on a similar level to other classical and medieval sources.
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Books on the topic "Use of Salisbury"

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Sandon, Nick. The use of Salisbury. 2nd ed. Newton Abbot, Devon, England: Antico Church Music, 1990.

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Sarum use: The ancient customs of Salisbury. Reading: Spire Books, 2008.

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Baxter, Philip. Sarum use: The development of a medieval code of liturgy and customs. Salisbury: Sarum Script, 1994.

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Salisbury. London: Haus, 2006.

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Price, Francis. A series of particular and ufeful observations, made with great diligence and care, upon that admirable structure, the Cathedral-Church of Salisbury: Calculated for the ufe and amufement of gentlemen ... Andover: Salisbury & Stonehenge Edition Facsimiles, 1997.

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Nick, Sandon, ed. The Use of Salisbury. Newton Abbot): Antico Church Music, 1986.

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Monumenta Ritualia Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ: The Occasional Offices of the Church of England According to the Old Use of Salisbury, the Prymer in English, and Other Prayers and Forms; Volume 3. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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Maskell, William, Catholic Church, and Church of England. Monumenta Ritualia Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ: The Occasional Offices Of The Church Of England According To The Old Use Of Salisbury, The Prymer In English, And Other Prayers And Forms, Volume 2. Arkose Press, 2015.

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Midwinter, Eric C. Salisbury (British Prime Ministers of the 20th Century) (British Prime Ministers of the 20th Century). Haus Publishers Ltd., 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Use of Salisbury"

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"Conclusion: ‘Not entirely as they do at Salisbury’." In The Use of Hereford, 725–30. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315551807-27.

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Salisbury, Mark. "A Framework for Managing the Life Cycle of Knowledge in Global Organizations." In Global Aspects and Cultural Perspectives on Knowledge Management, 64–80. IGI Global, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-555-1.ch005.

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This chapter describes a framework for managing the life cycle of knowledge in global organizations. The approaches described in this chapter were initially used to successfully build a knowledge dissemination system for the laboratories and facilities that are under the direction of the United States Department of Energy (DOE) (Salisbury & Plass, 2001). The follow-on work to this effort was the development of a collaboration application that fed the dissemination system for the DOE laboratories and facilities. The resulting system managed the life cycle (creation, preservation, dissemination and application) of knowledge for the DOE laboratories and facilities (Salisbury, 2003). While seen as a highly successful system, a significant problem was the difficulty in identifying the right knowledge that needed to get to the right people at the right time. This is also a significant problem for global organizations that need to share their knowledge across international boundaries. What is needed to solve this problem for global organizations is a systemic way that can be applied as an organizational strategy to identify this knowledge, the people that needed it, and the time it should be accessible. This chapter focuses on the use of performance objectives for managing the “right” knowledge in a global organization. In the next section, the background of the projects that inspired the framework is introduced. Next, the framework itself is discussed: the theoretical foundation for the framework, Work Processes, Learning Processes, and Methodologies for managing the life cycle of knowledge in a global organization. (For a full discussion of this approach in book form, see Salisbury, 2009).
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O'Daly, Irene. "The Roman inheritance." In John of Salisbury and the medieval Roman renaissance. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526109491.003.0002.

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This chapter opens with an investigation of John’s impression of the material inheritance of ancient Rome. It examines how John would have accessed Roman writings, looking in particular at his means of access to sources in the library of Canterbury cathedral. It looks in depth at John’s use of the works of Cicero and Seneca, establishing the texts to which he had access at the point of composition of his major works. Finally, it introduces the role played by patristic writers in the transmission of classical texts to the Middle Ages, focusing particularly on the works of Augustine, Lactantius, Gregory and Ambrose.
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Holmes, Stephen Mark. "Liturgy in Scotland before 1560." In Scottish Liturgical Traditions and Religious Politics, 19–35. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474483056.003.0002.

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This chapter gives a sketch of the forms of public worship in Scotland before the overthrow of the Latin liturgy, based primarily on surviving liturgical books and fragments. Liturgy in Scotland, before the Protestant Reformation of 1559-60, was simply a series of variants of the Latin liturgy of the West adapted in various ways for local use. These liturgical variants, uses or rites, were taken from places or groups outside Scotland such as Salisbury, Rome and the religious orders. When James IV’s 1507 licence to print the Aberdeen Breviary and other liturgical books speaks of ‘our awin Scottis use’, this sounds more like a wish than a description, unless it simply means the local reception and adaptation of these rites from elsewhere. This reception and diversity is the subject of this chapter
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Gordon, Robert B. "Community, Culture, and Industrial Ecology." In A Landscape Transformed. Oxford University Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195128185.003.0013.

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The people who settied northwestern Connecticut created an agricultural surplus that allowed them to undertake industrial ventures within a few years of their arrival. Their knowledge of the mechanical arts, coupled with the region’s natural resources, gave them opportunities to make material goods needed by their neighbors. Successive generations continued industrial use of the region’s natural resources over the next two centuries, each making its own choices about how to structure its enterprise within the framework of values and beliefs held separately by individuals and in common within the community. Each had to respond to changes in markets and the advent of new products and techniques. These opportunities, and the participants’ choices about how to use them, combined to create the region’s industrial ecology. Like the rest of the New England hill country, northwestern Connecticut had two abundant, renewable natural resources: streams with steep gradients and reliable flow for waterpower, and forest that covered the large areas that were too steep or too thinly mantled with soil for decent pasture. Millwrights could easily build waterpower systems on the streams, and farmers could manage the forest for continuous production of fuel wood, since it regrew trees to useful size within about twenty years. Unlike other highlands, however, northwestern Connecticut had a unique mineral resource: iron ore beds unmatched elsewhere in New England. Everyone in the newly settled lands and on the frontiers expanding into Vermont and New York in the early eighteenth century needed iron products. As described in chapter 3, individuals throughout the Salisbury district, aided by family members or fluid partnerships, built bloomery forges that they operated as components of their cropping, husbandry, or mercantile enterprises. Nearly every family in Kent and the other new towns had a partner in one of the forges. Individuals lacking metallurgical skills or access to any capital dug ore or cut wood. Others developed their skills as colliers or millwrights. Negotiated exchanges of labor and services among these artisans promoted interdependence within the community. As the colonists in southern New England increasingly mechanized their grain, timber, and cloth production in the mid—eighteenth century, they brought a new opportunity to the ironmakers of the Salisbury disno trict. By making standard parts for grain mills, sawmills, fulling mills, and oil mills that they could distribute widely, Salisbury ironmakers added value to the bar iron they made and enlarged the scope of their market.
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Davey, Jennifer. "‘The most attentive hostess in the world’." In Mary, Countess of Derby, and the Politics of Victorian Britain, 59–80. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198786252.003.0003.

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Throughout her political career, Mary politicized the space around her, particularly her family homes. The chapter examines how Mary used the home as a political tool. It explores her political entertaining at Hatfield House as Marchioness of Salisbury, examining the influential role she played in political life during the late 1850s and early 1860s. Using the parliamentary debates that foreshadowed the Second Reform Act of 1867 as a backdrop, this chapter goes on to explore the symbiosis between the political space Mary constructed and the agenda of the national polity. This analysis is further developed by a consideration of how Mary used the family home for political purposes during her second marriage. Throughout, Mary’s use of political space is understood as an expression of her agency and ideology, rather than the physical manifestation of the obligation she felt as a wife.
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Ip-Soo-Ching, Jean Marie, and Suzanne Zyngier. "The Rise of “Environmental Sustainability Knowledge” in Business Strategy and Entrepreneurship." In International Business Strategy and Entrepreneurship, 23–40. IGI Global, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-4753-4.ch002.

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This chapter articulates a conceptual framework to analyse the management of environmental sustainability knowledge in tourism that is underpinned by both the knowledge-based view of the firm (Grant, 1996; Spender, 1996) and the KM Life Cycle (Liebowitz & Beckman, 1998; Salisbury, 2012). This deliberate management of knowledge enables NTOs to build a knowledge-base about the natural environment and to use that knowledge for environmental sustainability, business sustainability, and local community education. Ten NTOs in Australia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam were investigated to analyse their KM of environmental sustainability. In supporting the knowledge-based view and KM of environmental sustainability knowledge, a further conceptual framework is also advanced for the analysis of how Information Technology enables environmental sustainability knowledge to be created, captured, shared, and applied at NTOs among their staff, customers, and communities.
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Mclean, Iain. "Financing the Union: Goschen, Barnett, and Beyond." In Anglo-Scottish Relations, from 1900 to Devolution and Beyond. British Academy, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197263310.003.0006.

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In the ensuing 1886 General Election, the Conservatives swept to power with their new Liberal Unionist allies, including Joseph Chamberlain and George Goschen. Lord Salisbury appointed Goschen as Chancellor of the Exchequer later in 1886. Goschen announced his ‘equivalent’ or ‘proportion’ in his 1888 Budget. The politics of Barnett formula's origins and its implications for public finance since 1997 are shown. This formula was never intended to be permanent. Lord Barnett has told the Treasury Committee that he did not expect it to last ‘a year or even twenty minutes’. Barnett was also a new Goschen for modern unionists. Three of the four main parties have called for Barnett reform. Scottish National Party and some Liberal Democrat and Conservative politicians have called for ‘fiscal autonomy’. The chapter then outlines the Conservative fiscal autonomists' position, not necessarily in language they would use. The explanation of regression on past spending is also given.
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Caldwell, John. "Insular Uses Other Than That of Salisbury." In Music and Liturgy in Medieval Britain and Ireland, 50–82. Cambridge University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108694988.003.

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O'Daly, Irene. "Editions and translaitons used." In John of Salisbury and the medieval Roman renaissance. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7765/9781526109514.00004.

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Conference papers on the topic "Use of Salisbury"

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Self-Trail, Jean M., Yang Zhang, Will D. Rush, James C. Zachos, Marci M. Robinson, and James G. Ogg. "CHRONOSTRATIGRAPHIC FRAMEWORK AND COMPOSITE SECTION COMPILATION OF UPPER PALEOCENE AND LOWER EOCENE SEDIMENTS FROM THE SALISBURY EMBAYMENT, USA." In GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019am-335121.

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Rush, William D., James C. Zachos, Jeffrey Kiehl, and Christine Shields. "CHANGES IN HYDROLOGY AND SEDIMENTATION DURING THE PALEOCENE-EOCENE THERMAL MAXIMUM IN THE SALISBURY EMBAYMENT, USA." In Joint 69th Annual Southeastern / 55th Annual Northeastern GSA Section Meeting - 2020. Geological Society of America, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2020se-344654.

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