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1

Karklins, Rasma. The dissent/coercion nexus in the USSR. Urbana-Champaign: Soviet Interview Project, 1987.

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2

Pratt, Ray. Rhythm and resistance: The political uses of American popularmusic. Washington, [D.C.]: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1994.

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Pratt, Ray. Rhythm and resistance: The political uses of American popular music. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1994.

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4

Rhythm and resistance: Explorations in the political uses of popular music. New York: Praeger, 1990.

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5

Jewish resistance during the Holocaust: Moral uses of violence and will. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.

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Police, Illinois State. D.A.R.E.: Drug Abuse Resistance Education. Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois State Police, 2003.

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Police, Illinois State. D.A.R.E.: Drug Abuse Resistance Education. Springfield, Ill.]: ISP, 1999.

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8

Elaine, McClarnand MacKinnon, ed. Mass uprisings in the USSR: Protest and rebellion in the post-Stalin years. Armonk, N.Y: M.E. Sharpe, 2002.

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9

Mackenzie, Fiona. Land, ecology and resistance in Kenya, 1880-1952. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press for the International African Institute, 1998.

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10

Mackenzie, Fiona. Land, ecology, and resistance in Kenya, 1880-1952. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann for the Intenational African Institute, London, 1997.

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11

Kasper, S., and S. A. Montgomery. Treatment-resistant depression. Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013.

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12

Therapy-resistant schizophrenia. Basel: Karger, 2010.

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13

Sandberg, Finn. Natural remedies: Their origins and uses. London: Taylor & Francis, 2001.

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14

Bonilla, Adriel R. Antibiotic resistance: Causes and risk factors, mechanisms and alternatives. New York: Nova Science Publishers, 2009.

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15

Hays, Ron D. How generalizable are adolescents' beliefs about pro-drug pressures and resistance self-efficacy? Santa Monica, CA: Rand, 1990.

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16

Police, Illinois State. D.A.R.E.: Drug Abuse Resistance Education : Missouri & Midwest Regional Training Center. Springfield, Ill.]: Printed by the authority of the State of Illinois, ISP Central Printing Section, 2000.

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17

Layered inequalities: Land grabbing, collective land rights and Afro-descendant resistance in Colombia. Berlin: Lit, 2014.

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18

III, Arch G. Mainous. Management of Antimicrobials in Infectious Diseases: Impact of Antibiotic Resistance. 2nd ed. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2010.

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19

Sexed work: Gender, race, and resistance in a Brooklyn drug market. Oxford: New York, 1997.

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20

Hirschheim, R. A. Information systems and user resistance: Theory and practice. 1988.

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21

Joseph, Ralina L. Postracial Resistance. NYU Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479862825.001.0001.

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Postracial Resistance: Black Women and the Uses of Strategic Ambiguity looks at how, in the first Black First Lady era, African American women celebrities, cultural producers, and audiences subversively used the tools of postracial discourse—the media-propagated notion that race and race-based discrimination are over, and that race and racism no longer affect the everyday lives of both Whites and people of color—in order to resist its very tenets. Black women’s resistance to disenfranchisement has a long history in the U.S., including struggles for emancipation, suffrage, and de jure and de facto civil rights. In the Michelle Obama era, some minoritized subjects used a different, more individual form of resistance by negotiating through strategic ambiguity. Joseph listens to and watches Black women in three different places in media culture: she uses textual analysis to read the strategies of the Black women celebrities themselves; she uses production analysis to harvest insights from interviews with Black women writers, producers, and studio lawyers; and she uses audience ethnography to engage Black women viewers negotiating through the limited representations available to them. The book arcs from critiquing individual successes that strategic ambiguity enables and the limitations it creates for Black women celebrities, to documenting the way performing strategic ambiguity can (perhaps) unintentionally devolve into playing into racism from the perspective of Black women television professionals and younger viewers.
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22

Klein, Eili Y. Antibiotic Resistance. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199976805.003.0068.

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Antibacterial resistance threatens the ability of physicians to treat infections, reversing medical gains and increasing the probability of morbidity and mortality in infected patients. Decreased antibiotic efficacy also threatens advanced surgical procedures dependent on antibiotic effectiveness, such as organ and prosthetic transplants. Even simple procedures consider antibiotic prophylaxis to be a standard means of controlling surgical site infections. Despite the link between increased antibiotic use and resistance, a large fraction of antimicrobial use is inappropriate, particularly for acute respiratory tract infections. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is the most significant antibiotic-resistant pathogen, but new pathogens such as carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae (CRE) are increasing in clinical significance. Antibiotic use and resistance is rising rapidly in developing countries, particularly India, China, and various African countries. The inappropriate use of antibiotics must be reduced, and incentives for the development of new antibiotics should be increased.
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23

Antibiotic Resistance. Springer, 2012.

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24

Rivers, Larry Eugene. Day-to-Day Resistance. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036910.003.0002.

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This chapter examines the various forms of conservative resistance used by slaves in Florida and often elsewhere within the slave empire of the United States. William Dusinberre called these types of actions or inactions nonviolent “dissidence.” Indeed, bondservants actively, though discreetly, resisted their owners on a day-to-day basis. In doing so, many slaves believed that they could either get away with their recalcitrance or use it to negotiate concessions from their masters. Since enslaved blacks knew that violent attacks could mean immediate death, they naturally and intelligently sought other means of expressing their discontent concerning plantation or farm regimens. Sometimes they made life uncomfortable for their masters, and sometimes, in the process, they made life uncomfortable for themselves.
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25

Leonard, Barry. How to Create a Hazus User Group: Hazus User Groups Help Create Disaster Resistant Communities. Diane Pub Co, 2003.

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26

United States. Federal Emergency Management Agency, ed. How to create a HAZUS user group: HAZUS user groups help create disaster resistant communities. [Washington, D.C.]: Federal Emergency Management Agency, 2002.

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27

1958-, Jones Phil, ed. Resistance, destructiveness, and refusal. Philadelphia: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 1999.

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28

MacIntyre, Iain M., and David J. Webb. Resistant hypertension. Edited by Neil Turner. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0217_update_001.

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Resistant hypertension is defined as a blood pressure above target despite adherence to at least three different antihypertensive agents. The term can be used to identify patients with difficult-to-treat hypertension, who might benefit from specialist investigation and/or treatment. It likely affects 10–15% of patients with hypertension. ‘White coat’ hypertension should be excluded first by the use of out-of-office blood pressure monitoring. Risk factors include obesity, older age, chronic kidney disease, and diabetes.Treatment is based on identifying and treating any underlying cause and through the use of multiple antihypertensive medications, in particular ensuring adequate diuretic therapy.
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29

Soulsby, Lord. Antimicrobial resistance: animal use of antibiotics. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198570028.003.0005.

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The evolution of resistance to microbes is one of the most significant problems in modern medicine, posing serious threats to human and animal health. The early work on the use of antibiotics to bacterial infections gave much hope that infectious diseases were no longer a problem, especially in the human field. However, as their use, indeed over use, progressed, resistance (both mono-resistance and multi-resistance), which was often transferable between different strains and species of bacteria, emerged. In addition, the situation is increasingly complex, as various mechanisms of resistance, including a wide range of β -lactamases, are now complicating the issue. The use of antibiotics in animals, especially those used for growth promotion, has come in for serious criticism, especially those where their use should be reserved for difficult human infections. To lend control, certain antibiotic growth promoters have been banned from use in the EU and the UK.It is now a decade since the UK House of Lords Science and Technology Committee (1998) highlighted concerns about antimicrobial resistance and the dangers to human health of resistant organisms derived from animals fed antibiotics for growth promotion or the treatment of infectious diseases. The concern expressed in the House of Lords report was similar to that in other major reports on the subject, for example from the World Health Organization, the Wellcome Foundation, the Advisory Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Food and the Swann Report (1969) in which it was recommended that antibiotics used in human medicine should not be used as growth promoters in animals. At the press conference to launch the Lord’s Report it was emphasized that unless serious attention was given to dealing with resistance ‘we may find ourselves returning to a pre-antibiotic era’. The evolution of resistance is one of the significant problems in modern medicine, a much changed situation when the early work on antibiotics gave hope that infectious diseases were no longer a problem, especially in the human field. Optimism was so strong that the Surgeon General of the USA, William H Stewart, in 1969 advised the US Congress that ‘it is time to close the book on infectious diseases and to declare that work against the pestilence is over’. This comment was not only mistaken but it was also damaging to human health undertakings and also reduced funding for research on infectious diseases.Despite the widespread support for and dependence on antibiotics, resistance was increasingly reported worldwide and to recognize the global problem a group of medical workers established in 1981, at Tufts University, the Alliance for the Prudent use of Antibiotics (APUA). This now has affiliated chapters on over 60 countries, many in the developing world. APUA claims to be the ‘world’s leading organization conducting antimicrobial resistance research, education, capacity building and advocacy at the global and grass roots levels’.
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30

1952-, Teicher Beverly A., ed. Cancer drug resistance. Totowa, N.J: Humana Press, 2006.

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31

Neville, Kate J. Fueling Resistance. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197535585.001.0001.

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This book explores how and why controversies over liquid biofuels (bioethanol and biodiesel) and hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) unfolded in surprisingly similar ways in the Global North and South. In the early 2000s the search was on for fuels that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions, spur economic development in rural regions, and diversify national energy supplies. Biofuels and fracking took center stage as promising commodities and technologies. But controversy quickly erupted. Global enthusiasm for these fuels and the widespread projections for their production around the world collided with local politics. Rural and remote places, such as coastal east Africa and Canada’s Yukon territory, became hotbeds of contention in these new energy politics. Opponents of biofuels in Kenya and of fracking in the Yukon activated specific identities, embraced scale shifts across transnational networks, brokered relationships between disparate communities and interests, and engaged in contentious performances with symbolic resonance. To explain these convergent dynamics of contention and resistance, the book argues that the emergence of grievances and the mechanisms of mobilization that are used to resist new fuel technologies depend less on the type of energy developed than on intersecting elements of the political economy of energy—specifically finance, ownership, and trade relations. Taken together, the intersecting elements of the political economy of energy shape patterns of resistance in new energy frontiers.
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32

McCutcheon, Robert, Christoph U. Correll, Oliver Howes, and John Kane. Treatment response and resistance in schizophrenia: principles and definitions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198828761.003.0002.

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Clear, accepted definitions of treatment resistance and response are needed so that clinical trials of treatments can be compared, and evidence can be meaningfully interpreted to inform clinical practice. In this chapter, we review the definitions of treatment response and resistance used in clinical trials, highlighting the variability in definitions used across studies, as well as a number of problems with the definitions used, including mixing treatment-intolerant patients with treatment-resistant patients and limited evaluation of the adequacy of treatment in many cases. The chapter then summarizes the work undertaken by the Treatment Response and Resistance in Psychosis working group to produce consensus guidelines and benchmarks to address these issues. Also reviewed are the principles underlying the concept of resistance developed by the working group. Finally, the chapter discusses the implications of these findings for clinical practice.
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33

Association, Chemical Industries, ed. Flame retardant products and their uses. London: Chemical Industries Association, 1990.

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34

Barducci, Marco. War, Resistance, Revolution. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198754589.003.0003.

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This chapter examines the uses of Grotius’ resistance theory primarily based on the analysis of the natural right of punishment and the law of war devised in De Iure. After an outline of Grotius’ view of resistance, the chapter moves on to examine its multifaceted reception in England until after Locke’s re-elaboration in the Two Treatises of Government, during which time it provided an intellectual and legal groundwork for negotiation between Whigs and Tories around the exclusion of James II and the ascension of William and Mary. In this regard, Grotius not only brought to England a theory of conquest that filled a gap in the shared tradition of common law and ancient constitution, but his attempt to reconceptualize resistance theory in terms of just war fit particularly well in the justification both of the Republic in 1649 and of the Glorious Revolution.
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35

Pattison, James. Non-violent Resistance. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198755203.003.0006.

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This chapter considers non-violent methods. The first part of the chapter largely defends the case for civilian peacekeeping and, in doing so, delineates how this measure can be effective despite being unarmed. The chapter also highlights the limitations of civilian peacekeeping, including its small scale. The second part of this chapter considers civilian defence against an external aggressor. Although the chapter argues that this may sometimes work, it also highlights one central limitation: it is unlikely to be effective against an aggressor that does not wish to occupy. Overall, the chapter argues that non-violence can play some role in tackling conflict, human rights abuses, and mass atrocities. Notwithstanding, the chapter also makes it clear that these non-violent options should not generally be undertaken at the expense of more coercive ones, such as traditional peacekeeping and military defence, but instead sometimes used in addition to these methods.
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36

Joseph, Ralina L. Postracial Resistance: Black Women, Media, and the Uses of Strategic Ambiguity. NYU Press, 2018.

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37

Postracial Resistance: Black Women, Media, and the Uses of Strategic Ambiguity. NYU Press, 2018.

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38

1949-, Bernal Samuel D., ed. Drug resistance in oncology. New York: M. Dekker, 1997.

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39

(Editor), Diarmaid Hughes, and Dan I. Andersson (Editor), eds. Antibiotic Development and Resistance. CRC, 2001.

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40

McIntosh, RA, CR Wellings, and RF Park. Wheat Rusts. CSIRO Publishing, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643101463.

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Although stem rust has been controlled by means of resistant cultivars, leaf and stripe rust continue as problems for many growing areas of the world. Wheat Rusts: An Atlas of Resistance Genes has been prepared by specialists from one of the leading international laboratories, and illustrates with colour photographs typical resistance phenotypes associated with most known genes for resistance to the three rust diseases of wheat. Relevant details for each gene include chromosome location, aspects of genetics and pathogen variation, the effects of environment on expression, origin, availability in genetic and breeding stocks, and use in agriculture. This atlas includes an introduction to host:pathogen genetics, methodologies for wheat rust research and breeding for resistance.
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41

Wilson, A. P. R., and Preet Panesar. Antimicrobial drugs in critical illness. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199600830.003.0053.

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The pharmacokinetics of antimicrobials are altered in critically-ill patients, particularly in the presence of renal or hepatic failure. Maintaining a choice or diversity of antibiotics is important due to the emergence of resistance. Antibiotic use should also be kept to the minimum and local protocols need to be established. For community-acquired infection, co-amoxiclav or a parenteral cephalosporin can be used, while for hospital-acquired infection, piperacillin/tazobactam, ciprofloxacin, or ceftazidime are recommended. For suspected vascular catheter infection or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection, teicoplanin or vancomycin should be used, with meropenem or imipenem reserved for second line treatment. Prophylactic antibiotics should not be continued once a surgical patient has returned from the theatre. Patients with febrile neutropenia receive piptazobactam, meropenem, ceftazidime or ciprofloxacin and a glycopeptide. Antifungals, usually caspofungin or liposomal amphotericin, are used if fungal infection is suspected, especially after failed antibacterial treatment. Cephalosporin use has declined as they have been linked with emergence of MRSA and Clostridium difficile. However, this reflects overuse and they still have a place as part of a diverse choice of antibiotics. Vancomycin and teicoplanin use has increased greatly in order to treat MRSA and line infections, but resistance remains unusual. Carbapenem use has increased rapidly with the emergence of extended spectrum beta-lactamase producing Gram-negative bacteria.
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42

Edgeworth, Jonathan. Antibiotic resistance in the ICU. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199600830.003.0289.

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The two objectives of ensuring early appropriate antimicrobial treatment for septic patients on the intensive care unit (ICU), and limiting emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance are both complicated and potentially conflicting. Increasingly unpredictable resistance, particularly amongst Gram-negative bacteria, through both local selection and transmission, and importation of globally successful resistant clones encourages the use of broad-spectrum empiric antimicrobials for septic patients, including in combination. This may lead to a vicious cycle whereby increasing antibiotic use increases resistance, which in turn leads to higher levels of inappropriate therapy. In response, the multi-disciplinary ICU-team implements infection prevention and control, and antimicrobial stewardship programmes. Antimicrobial stewardship programmes provide interventions and guidance to optimize appropriate therapy,whilelimiting unnecessary use through a variety of measures. The development of rapid molecular testing for bacterial identification and antimicrobial susceptibility prediction could potentially bring useful microbiological information to the bedside at the time of therapeutic decision making.
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43

P, Chrousos George, Olefsky Jerrold M, and Samols Ellis, eds. Hormone resistance and hypersensitivity states. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2002.

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44

Cancer Drug Resistance Research Perspectives. Nova Science Publishers Inc, 2007.

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45

Antibiotic resistance: Methods and protocols. Totowa, N.J: Humana Press, 2001.

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46

Rivers, Larry Eugene. Stepping Up the Degrees of Resistance. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036910.003.0003.

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This chapter looks at how on the plantations and farms of nineteenth-century Florida, enslaved people, like their counterparts throughout the South, rarely rose up in rebellion against their masters. In their daily dissidence, slaves—as Gerald W. Mullin noted for eighteenth-century slaves in Virginia—more commonly used inward or non-threatening forms of rebellion that did not undermine Florida′s slave society in any profound manner. These could involve work stoppages and feigned illnesses, among other things. Yet, enslaved Florida blacks often did not bite their tongues when expressing thoughts about their work routines. These tactics could have proven self-destructive and even fatal in a violent Florida frontier area, but slaves still used these token forms of rebellion to wrest concessions from their masters as they strove to create, preserve, and protect family and community.
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47

Johnson, Elizabeth M. Antifungal susceptibility testing and resistance. Edited by Christopher C. Kibbler, Richard Barton, Neil A. R. Gow, Susan Howell, Donna M. MacCallum, and Rohini J. Manuel. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198755388.003.0047.

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The availability of choice of systemically active antifungal agents and the proliferation in the number of fungal species implicated in invasive disease have meant that clinicians are increasingly looking for guidance from clinical laboratory results to help select the most appropriate agent. There are now well-established and predictable patterns of innate in vitro resistance to one or more antifungal agents associated with many yeast and mould species. This chapter provides definitions for the most frequently used terminology and outlines some of the issues surrounding antifungal susceptibility testing with yeast and mould isolates. Reference methods published by the Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) and the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) are discussed. Both innate and emergent antifungal drug resistance are increasingly recognized as limiting factors in the selection of antifungal agents, and the epidemiology and mechanisms of resistance are described for each of the major classes of antifungal agent.
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48

Horne, Gerald. Back in the USSR. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037924.003.0005.

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This chapter discusses Patterson's travel to the Soviet Union for treatment for his collapsed lungs, as it was the only place where a Negro without money could get adequate medical care. The FBI maintained that it was during this era—the mid-1930s—that Patterson was ensconced in the anti-Nazi underground in Europe, darting furtively in and out of Hamburg and Paris particularly. The authorities had reason to know, as they kept track of his movements as the ailing Communist—then listed as residing at 181 West 135th Street in Harlem—departed from New York for Europe on July 21, 1934, after spending a tumultuous two weeks in Cuba in May. However, Patterson was not the only U.S. Negro who had served time in the Soviet Union, for his comrade James Ford had spent more than two years there as well, as Moscow—along with Hamburg—had become a fortress of anti-Jim Crow and anticolonial resistance.
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49

Kuruvilla, Santosh Jacob. A study of building coefficients used in earthquake resistant design. 1987.

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50

Shin, Ong-in. Wave forces on concrete pipes and plates used as seabed artificial reef units. 1987.

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