Literatura académica sobre el tema "Anambra State Housing Development Corporation"

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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Anambra State Housing Development Corporation"

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Peterson, Eric David. "The Urban Development Corporation’s “Imaginative Use of Credit”: Creating Capital for Affordable Housing Development". Journal of Urban History 45, n.º 6 (7 de septiembre de 2018): 1174–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0096144218796466.

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Heralded as an innovative if short-lived builder of affordable housing, in 1975, the New York State Urban Development Corporation (UDC) defaulted on more than $2 billion in debt obligations and narrowly avoided bankruptcy. Offering the first detailed examination of its finances, this article argues the UDC was prescient of a new model for public-private housing finance that in the 1980s emerged in the ashes of conventional, state-financed public housing. In response to many of the long-standing challenges with government-produced housing, particularly inadequate funding, the UDC’s creation presaged the debt-driven model of development which would mature in the subsequent decades. While many scholars continue to reify criticism of government-created housing projects often on the basis of design or policy defects, the UDC’s failure highlights the importance of financial and political support in shaping the success of subsidized housing.
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Nwanna, Uju Christiana, Ifeanyi Mathew Azuji y Esther Chinyere Ejichukwu. "Economic Distress Arising From Covid-19 Pandemic as a Factor in Development of Anxiety Symptoms among Undergraduate Students in Anambra State-Nigeria". Current Research Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 3, n.º 2 (30 de diciembre de 2020): 244–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.12944/crjssh.3.2.11.

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The economic situation of a person or family is an important contributory factor to the individual’s health status, hence would likely contribute to the anxiety symptoms they experience, especially in an unforeseen pandemic situation currently being experienced in the world today. This study therefore examined economic distress arising from covid-19 pandemic as a factor in development of anxiety symptoms among undergraduate students in Anambra State, Nigeria. Five research questions guided the study while one null hypothesis tested at 0.05 level of significance. Correlational research design was used in carrying out the study. The population of the study comprised of 39,697 undergraduate students in Universities in Anambra State. A multi-stage sampling procedure was employed in the selection of 1,900 participants for this study. The instruments for data collection are questionnaires titled; “Distressing Economic Survey Questionnaire (PESQ)” and “Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI)”. The reliability coefficients of the instruments were 0.93 for PESQ and 0.92 for BAI. Data was collected by sending the questionnaires along with the consent form appended to it through e-mails, WhatsApp and Telegram messengers to the contacts of the researchers and analyzed using Percentages, answering the research questions 1-3., Pearson r. for research questions 4-5 and regression analysis for testing the hypothesis. The findings of the study revealed among others that there is a low positive relationship of 0.24 existing between the housing condition of the university undergraduate students’ and the anxiety symptoms experienced. The findings also revealed that the undergraduate students’ living status and housing condition are significant predictors of their experience of anxiety symptoms in Anambra State. Based on the findings of the study, it was recommended among others that there is a serious need to have fully functional guidance counsellors in the university who are not combining counselling with lecturing. These guidance counsellors in the school will help to explore varieties of ways of coping with the distressing economic conditions to reduce feelings of anxiety and possibly handling the anxiety before it becomes a source of problem to the students.
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Tsitsin, K. G. "ENERGY-SAVING TECHNOLOGIES – FUTURE OF HOUSING CONSTRUCTION". Strategic decisions and risk management, n.º 2 (25 de octubre de 2014): 50–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.17747/2078-8886-2013-2-50-51.

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The article covers development of energy performance and energy saving in Russia, relevant issues of development of energy-saving construction, as well as pilot projects of construction of energy-saving (“smart”) houses implemented with participation of State Corporation — Housing and Utility Reform Foundation. A separate emphasis is made on perspectives of development of “green” (environmentally friendly) construction, the main task of which is reduction of total influence of constriction site on environment and human health, what is reached on account of efficient consumption of energy, water and other resources, as well as reduction of waste and emissions.
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Iloanya, Kenneth, Chidiebere S. Nebo y Juliet Tobechi Egole. "Staff Training and Development as an Effective Tool for Organizational Efficiency : A Study of Water Corporation Anambra State ( 2005 - 2015 )". NG-Journal of Social Development 5, n.º 1 (2015): 64–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.12816/0032081.

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Belova, Irina. "Housing and communal services as a driver of the Urals Federal District sustainable development". E3S Web of Conferences 258 (2021): 06031. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202125806031.

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The study aims to analyze the current state of the housing and communal services market in the Ural Federal District. The features of the housing and communal services market in the Urals Federal District have been investigated, key trends in the development of the studied market have been identified. The assessment of the volume of the housing and communal services market in the Urals Federal District in value terms is carried out, its dynamics in 2015-2020 is presented. The nature of the investigated market volume dynamics is revealed, the average annual rate of its growth and the drivers of market growth are determined. The structure of housing and communal services and the structure of the housing stock in the Ural Federal District within the regions and districts are considered. The heterogeneity of these structures is shown. A significant share (about 66.0%) in both structures presented falls on Sverdlovsk and Chelyabinsk regions. The study is based on statistical data from the Federal State Statistics Service of the Russian Federation, data from specialized portals (Unified information resource - GIS Housing and Communal Services, State Corporation - Fund for Assistance to Reforming Housing and Utilities Sector (Housing and Utilities Fund)). The results obtained in this work helps further research to conduct a competitive analysis on the housing and communal services market in the Urals Federal District, determine the shares of the largest competitors in the studied market, estimate the volume of housing and communal services consumption per capita, as well as the saturation and estimated potential of the housing and communal services market in the Urals Federal District.
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GASPARYAN, Armen y Gulnara SHAIKHUTDINOVA. "ROLE OF MORTGAGE LOANING IN THE HOUSING MARKET". Vestnik BIST (Bashkir Institute of Social Technologies) 137 (28 de diciembre de 2020): 42–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.47598/2078-9025-2020-4-49-42-47.

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The purpose of the scientific work is to assess the state of the housing construction market and the housing fund as a whole, as well as the level of influence of the mortgage lending sphere on it. The work uses mainly methods of analysis of government statistics, information provided by the State Corporation DOM.RF, the official sites of key banks, own forecasts and calculations of the analyzed information. On the fact of the analysis made an assessment of the housing stock, the main mortgage products, identified the main directions of development of the market for housing construction and stream lending. Highlighted the main formation of conditions for the availability of mortgage loans, stricter requirements for borrowers to maintain the safety of loans and their payments, the active development of government programs to subsidize the market rate to support the market of housing construction, the growth of commissioning of housing over the next 3–4 years.
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Oyedele, J. B. y M. F. Oyesode. "Residents’ Perception of Importance and Satisfaction with Infrastructure in Selected Public Housing Estates in Osun State, Nigeria". Nigerian Journal of Environmental Sciences and Technology 3, n.º 2 (octubre de 2019): 398–409. http://dx.doi.org/10.36263/nijest.2019.02.0152.

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This study examined residents’ level of satisfaction with the available infrastructure in Moremi, Oroki and Akoda Estates in Osun State, with a view to enhancing provision of infrastructure. Primary data was used for the study. Questionnaire was used to elicit information from the residents of the three selected public housing estates from the three senatorial districts in Osun State, each public housing estate representing one senatorial district. These public housing estates are under the portfolio of Osun State Property Development Corporation (OSPDC), Osogbo. The public estates include, Moremi Estate in Osun east senatorial district with 416 residential buildings, Oroki Estate in Osun central senatorial district with 816 residential buildings and Akoda estate in Osun West senatorial district with 46 residential buildings. These reflect a total of 1,278 residential buildings where systematic random sampling was adopted in selecting 20% of the residential buildings in the three selected public housing estates. A total of 255 residential buildings were selected, from which a resident was selected for questionnaire administration. The data collected were analyzed using relative importance index (RII) and Residents' Satisfaction Index (RSI) analysis. The result showed that the average Residents' Satisfaction Index (RSI) for the level of satisfaction derived from the infrastructure in the study area was 2.49 which showed that the residents were not satisfied. This study concluded that the residents were not deriving adequate satisfaction from the infrastructure available in the public housing estates. The study recommends that there is need to integrate residents’ preferred infrastructure into development policies: The residents’ preferred infrastructure identified in this study should be linked and integrated into the development policy designs for the estates.
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Fortson, Alistair W. "Victory Abroad, Disaster at Home". California History 94, n.º 3 (2017): 20–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ch.2017.94.3.20.

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Richmond, California, a small industrial center north of Oakland and just east of San Francisco, expanded from a prewar population of 23,000 to more than 100,000 permanent residents in 1942. While Henry J. Kaiser's shipbuilding corporation advertised for—and city leaders sought—white skilled labor, military realities and expanding Allied production needs encouraged the hiring of unskilled African American, indigenous, and Chinese American men and women in unprecedented numbers. While the early struggles of workers to find housing and adequate services in Richmond and the East Bay more broadly have been clearly documented by historians, a legacy of continued substandard housing and services disproportionately affected minority workers and their families. Redlined, or denied rental applications because of race through legal policy and unofficial neighborhood agreements, minority workmen and women disproportionately remained in substandard housing even after the construction of federally funded housing units. Exposed to industrial pollutants, urban waste, and human effluent despite the efforts of both humanitarian-minded industrialists and local, state, and federal government officials, these minority groups faced racial and class-based challenges during World War II home front production, which have been overshadowed by the triumphant image of Rosie the Riveter and the total war victory of that “greatest generation.” Research in the Bancroft Library, the Richmond Museum, and other archival databases demonstrates how public contracts became sources of private money for industrialists, leading to the development of facilities that public funds could not support, and thereby reducing the quality of life for minority residents.
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Kim, Jin-Won, Namhyuk Ham y Jae-Jun Kim. "Quantitative Analysis of Waiting Length and Waiting Time for Frame Construction Work Activities Using a Queue Model; Focusing on Korean Apartment Construction". Sustainability 13, n.º 7 (29 de marzo de 2021): 3778. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13073778.

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The frame construction of an apartment complex that consists of multiple buildings encounters various uncertainties, owing to the complex relationships between units of work. Currently, the period of such a construction is calculated based on the number of floors of the highest building in the complex. This study quantitatively analyzes an apartment frame construction period using a queue model and evaluates the validity of the estimated period. In this regard, a methodology is proposed for analyzing the construction period by applying the concept of a customer and a server. A case study on the duration of an apartment frame construction period is conducted with the Korea Land and Housing Corporation, which has supplied the largest number of apartments in South Korea. It was found that the stable state of a queue system was observed when the rate of server utilization was applied to the basement and above-ground floors. However, a stable state was not reached on the ground floor. This study includes non-working days in its calculation and quantitatively analyzes uncertainty factors during construction. Therefore, the findings can be practically utilized to quantitatively plan the durations of work units in an apartment frame construction.
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Morakinyo, Kolawole Opeyemi. "Factors influencing personalization of dwellings among residents of selected public housing estates Lagos Nigeria". ARTEKS : Jurnal Teknik Arsitektur 6, n.º 1 (1 de abril de 2021): 85–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.30822/arteks.v6i1.620.

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Several factors have been implicated as responsible for personalization of dwellings. These factors ranges from demographic, socioeconomic and cultural. Demographic factors however, have been most frequently cited with respect to housing behaviour of households. Within the context of public housing, this study seeks to investigate factors influencing personalization of dwellings among residents of public housing estates using selected Public Housing Estates of the Lagos State Development and Property Corporation (LSDPC) as case study. The cross-sectional survey research design was employed in this study. This involved collection of primary data using structured questionnaire and personal observations. Four public housing estates were selected purposively comprising three low-income and one medium-income housing estate out of 22 low-income and 10 medium-income estates, being the largest estates. The sampling frame for the four selected estates comprised 9734 housing units in 1361 blocks of flat out of which systematic random sampling was used to select a sample size of 973 housing units. The result of the binary logistic regression revealed gender, religion, educational and income level, current household size, satisfaction with housing design, living status and availability of alternative dwelling were all significantly associated with personalization of dwellings. Lower odds of personalization was found among the men (OR=0.003, p<0.05) when compared to the women. While the odds of personalization was 82.0% lower (OR=0.18, p<0.05) among respondents from other religious group relative to respondents affiliated to the Christian religion, respondents affiliated to the Islam religion were 18.0% (OR=0.82, p>0.05) less likely to personalize their dwellings relative to Christian respondents, although the result was not statistically significant for respondents affiliated to Islam women. While respondents with higher education were 85.0% (OR=0.15, p<0.05) less likely to personalize their dwellings, respondents with secondary education were 69.0% (OR=0.31, p>0.05) less likely to personalize their dwellings relative to respondents with maximum of primary education, though the results was not statistically significant among respondents with maximum of primary education. Other factors that were significantly associated with personalization of dwellings include: higher income level, household size, level of satisfactions with design, residency status and ownership of alternative apartment. The findings of this study reinforced the importance of socio-economic variables as important factors to be considered in the study of personalization of dwellings.
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Tesis sobre el tema "Anambra State Housing Development Corporation"

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McMillan, Ross J. "The institutional impediments to state - sponsored community development in Canada's north : the case of the Northwest Territories Housing Corporation". Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29983.

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This study identifies and describes three institutional impediments to state-sponsored community development in Canada's North. Community development is defined as both the process and product of purposive social action aimed at community empowerment. The central premise of the study is that community development initiatives offer promise for overcoming the pernicious effects of colonialism in the North. Dominant modes of northern economic and political development are described and are shown to have resulted in few lasting benefits for northern communities and to have contributed to a pervasive alienation and sense of powerlessness. Recent theory on community development and the state is used to demonstrate that state agencies can be expected to adopt community development objectives in response to conflict or community demands — not out of the benevolence of liberal policy makers. Similarly, the study argues that if community demands for empowerment wane, institutional impediments may undermine state-sponsored community development initiatives. Impediments to state-sponsored community development are illustrated through a case study of community development in the North. The study examines the factors which led to the adoption of a community development mandate by an agency of the territorial government — the Northwest Territories Housing Corporation — and it describes the forces which ultimately undermined its community development efforts. Three institutional impediments to state-sponsored community development in Canada's North are identified and described: government-imposed limitations on the independent actions of territorial agencies; shifting political priorities which stem, in part, from the unique form of electoral politics in the Northwest Territories; and intransigence and personnel changes within the bureaucracy. The principal implication of the findings is that practitioners and theorists alike must recognize that community development is an activity concerned with power and politics. In accordance with this recognition, community interests must not expect the state to adopt meaningful community development objectives unless it is in response to effective community demands, and must anticipate that institutional impediments may appear and undermine such efforts if these demands subside. These realizations must inform strategies for community empowerment before the promise of community development can be met in Canada's North.
Applied Science, Faculty of
Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of
Graduate
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Freemark, Yonah (Yonah Slifkin). "The entrepreneurial state : New York's Urban Development Corporation, an experiment to take charge of affordable housing production, 1968-1975". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/79198.

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Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2013.
Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [333]-341).
A federal-local partnership supports the creation of most new affordable housing in the United States. Washington's subsidies, which fund housing construction, vouchers, and tax credits, are paired with local development groups, which select sites, design projects, and manage operations. Yet for decades, despite their elevated status in the American federal system, state governments have all but abdicated responsibility for the direct production of affordable housing. Partly as a consequence, cities remain without adequate resources to address the dwelling needs of their poorest residents, and many suburbs have chosen to isolate themselves from the problem entirely. Between 1968 and 1975, however, New York State broke the mold by investing considerable resources in the Urban Development Corporation (UDC), a state-run builder that completed over 30,000 apartments for low- and moderate-income households. While contemporary government developers, following the "urban renewal" script, often built monofunctional, architecturally bland, public-finance-only apartment blocks confined to the limits of the inner city, the UDC operated at a statewide scale and constructed mixed-use and distinctively designed structures with the aid of private investment. As such, the agency provides historical evidence of a public sector entity responding to criticisms of previous government housing by innovating in terms of planning, design, and finance. This thesis offers insight into the conditions that influenced the UDC's development approach. Its example constitutes a "usable past" that can inform contemporary struggles to create affordable housing by documenting a potential role for the state in the production process. The agency built more housing, with designs more sensitive to their surroundings, than urban municipal authorities. In the suburbs, the UDC's unique political powers allowed it to address housing needs at the metropolitan scale. In three new communities, the agency articulated a vision of all-purpose developments with populations integrated by class. In all environments, the UDC reformed the government's approach to affordable housing construction-and it did so thanks to the powers it had been granted as a state agency. The agency's extraordinary productivity-combined with its unique approach-is indicative of the value of evaluating the UDC's methods if the goal is to expand the production of affordable housing. The political powers provided to the agency, particularly those that allowed it to override local governments, develop significant efficiencies of scale, and focus on the housing demands of the neediest portion of the population, offer a template for state governments today. Faced with continued challenges to access to quality, reasonably priced housing in many of the nation's metropolitan areas, the UDC demonstrates how a state housing development agency with adequate powers could operate and what benefits it would provide.
by Yonah Freemark.
M.C.P.
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Libros sobre el tema "Anambra State Housing Development Corporation"

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Anambra State (Nigeria). Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Affairs of the Savings and Loans Division of the Anambra State Housing Development Corporation. Report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Affairs of the Savings and Loans Division of the Anambra State Housing Development Corporation. [Enugu, Nigeria]: The Commission, 1985.

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Corporation, Anambra State (Nigeria) Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Affairs of the Savings and Loans Division of the Anambra State Housing Development. Government white paper on the report of Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Affairs of the Savings and Loans Division of the Anambra State Housing Development Corporation. Enugu: Govt. Printer, 1985.

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Cross River State (Nigeria). Commission of Inquiry into the Cross River State Agricultural Development Corporation. Conclusions of the government of Cross River State of Nigeria on the report of the Commission on Inquiry into the Cross River State Agricultural Development Corporation (A.D.C.). Calabar: Govt. Printer, 1986.

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Hawaii. Legislature. Office of the Legislative Auditor. Financial audit of the Housing and Community Development Corporation of Hawaii: A report to the Governor and the Legislature of the State of Hawaii. Honolulu, HI (465 South King Street, Room 500, Honolulu 96813): The Auditor, 2001.

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(Nigeria), Lagos State. Government views on the Report of the Tribunal of Enquiry into the Affairs of the Lagos State Development and Property Corporation and Its Related Parastatal Organisations. [Ikeja]: Lagos State Government of Nigeria, 1986.

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Housing Finance and Development Corporation (Hawaii). State of Hawaii, Housing Finance and Development Corporation: Combined financial statements, June 30, 1992 (with independent auditors' report thereon). Honolulu, Hawaii (677 Queen St., Suite 300, Honolulu 96813-9631): The Corporation, 1992.

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Olufemi, Olusola A. Institutional housing finance in Nigeria: A case study of the property development corporation of Oyo State. Ibadan: Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research (NISER), 1993.

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McMillan, Ross J. The institutional impediments to state-sponsored community development in Canada's north: The case of the Northwest Territories Housing Corporation. Vancouver: Centre for Human Settlements, University of British Columbia, 1991.

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New York (State). Division of Management Audit and State Financial Services. Mortgage Loan Enforcement and Administration Corporation, administration of debt service for Mitchell-Lama projects. [Albany, NY: The Division, 1999.

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United States. General Accounting Office. General Government Division. Housing enterprises: Investment authority, policies, and practices. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1997.

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Capítulos de libros sobre el tema "Anambra State Housing Development Corporation"

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Wetherell, Sam. "The Business Park". En Foundations, 164–87. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691193755.003.0007.

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This chapter discusses the suburban, postindustrial, and holistically planned developments such as the Cambridge Science Park. These were initiated and managed by a single authority, usually a private developer, and hosted a mixture of offices, light industry, and private research centers. The chapter also highlights the emergence of the business park, which the author described as a host of different developments that at various times have been called “office parks,” “science parks,” “research parks,” “industrial parks,” or “technology parks.” The chapter then looks at the history of a new late-twentieth-century urban form, looking at the kinds of working subjects that this form hoped to produce and attract, and its relationship to the state and the wider world. Ultimately, the chapter traces back where the book began, at Trafford Park. Ruined by deindustrialization and choked by geography, Trafford Park was transformed by a state development corporation into a massive business park by the 1980s. As with the private housing estate and shopping mall, this new urban form required a reimagining of the old.
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