941 resultados para Cork, Richard Boyle, Earl of, 1566-1643
Resumo:
Index.
Resumo:
NUC pre-1956
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Top Row: Shelly Adkins, Nikki Alexadner, Amy L. Ancona, Adem Arslani, Noel Baldwin, Lea Bell, Michelle Bellah, Nicole Bills, Sarah Boyle, Rebekah Brandstatter, Margitt Brigant, Matthew Brooks, Julie Campbell, Lea Clemmons
Row 2: Iracema M. Crawford, Amy Decker, Danielle Terry, Jennifer McGeown, Megan Lindsey Tvaska, Molly McIntyre, Sharon M. Hoover, Mary Beth Pohanka, Jennifer Nelson, Jennifer Carney, Katheryn E. Huffman, Toria Dial, Mary Dooley
Row 3: Pamela Earl, Stacy Ekelman, Jennfier Emery, Robert Farrell, Stephanie R. Faudel, Amy Fischer, Rochelle Fountain, Diane Fox
Row 4: Tina Garcia, Monica Gatica, Meredith Giles, Karla Giminez, Emily Goodsell, Barbara Gurd, Keren Kay Hahn, Beth Hosmer, Shana N. Howard, Cina Jackson-Hanner
Row 5: Kristy Jakubiak, Rebekah Johnson, Stephanie T. Johnson, Jennifer Jorissen, Richard W. Redman, Beverly Jones, Ada Sue Hinshaw, Nola Pender, Susan Boehm, Renee Kaplan, Angela Kendrick-Newing, Emily Kerschbaum, Donulae Knuckles
Row 6: Diane Kramer, Alyce Krause, Krista L. Kuczewski, Lori LaCrone, Melissa E. Lorencen, Sarah Lyons, Melissa Magante, Kathleen Mahon, Christy Mayes, Joseph Morris, Elizabeth Morrow, Tamala Myers, Michele Nextico
Row 7: Jacquelyn Nino, Denise Noto, Catherine Orser, Elizabeth Palad, Ann Peterson, Joshua Pietsch, Pati Putt, Lisa Reinhart, Jamie C. Renken, Amy Robbins, Ernest Saxton, Amy Schafer, Joelle Schroeder, Matthew Seiler
Row 8: Sarah Bellestri Shih, Kristen Sisson, Shalonda Smith, Kathleen Stewart, Jeannine Sutter, Jamie Swan, Arita Ann Sywenkyj, Julie Talbott, Diana Thorrez, Natasha Tokarz, Whitney Tonkin, Rea Tsatsanifos, Tina Urbanski
Row 9: Maricar Uy, Dana Van Singel, Tanya D. Venton, Christina Vitucci, Samuel Walsh, Susan Warren, Tiana Washington, Yvette White, Judy M. Wilson, Cerise Wotorson, Bella Yagolkovskaya, Karen Zalenko, Susan M. Zucal
Resumo:
This work by Richard Shapcott is, as the title provides, an introduction to international ethics. By taking a quick glance at the table of contents (see Figure 1) we see that he has systematically divided this particular discourse into its normative areas of concern (in other words its major areas of argument or research). When reading, we also see that a great deal of work has gone into the publication because the narrative is flowing, the arguments continuous, and because the tone of the work maintained its critical position throughout.
Resumo:
Dr. Richard Shapcott is the senior lecturer in International Relations at the University of Queensland. His areas of interest in research concern international ethics, cosmopolitan political theory and cultural diversity. He is the author of the recently published book titled International Ethics: A Critical Introduction; and several other pieces, such as, “Anti-Cosmopolitanism, the Cosmopolitan Harm Principle and Global Dialogue,” in Michalis’ and Petito’s book, Civilizational Dialogue and World Order. He’s also the author of “Dialogue and International Ethics: Religion, Cultural Diversity and Universalism, in Patrick Hayden’s, The Ashgate Research Companion to Ethics and International Relations.
Resumo:
This volume brings together a number of essays that seek to explore the nature of early modern scholarship, ostensibly with special regard to the themes of interdisciplinarity and collaboration. As one might expect, the essays thus cover a gamut of topics – political manoeuvring, philosophical debates, gift-giving and dramatic performance – and each study is important and useful in its own right. As a whole, however, this collection serves more as a starting point for an exploration of its themes, than as an authoritative overview of the subject at hand.
Resumo:
To identify microRNAs potentially involved in melanomagenesis, we compared microRNA expression profiles between melanoma cell lines and cultured melanocytes. The most differentially expressed microRNA between the normal and tumor cell lines was miR-211. We focused on this pigment-cell-enriched miRNA as it is derived from the microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF)-regulated gene, TRPM1 (melastatin). We find that miR-211 expression is greatly decreased in melanoma cells and melanoblasts compared to melanocytes. Bioinformatic analysis identified a large number of potential targets of miR-211, including POU3F2 (BRN2). Inhibition of miR-211 in normal melanocytes resulted in increased BRN2 protein, indicating that endogenous miR-211 represses BRN2 in differentiated cells. Over-expression of miR-211 in melanoma cell lines changed the invasive potential of the cells in vitro through directly targeting BRN2 translation. We propose a model for the apparent non-overlapping expression levels of BRN2 and MITF in melanoma, mediated by miR-211 expression.
Resumo:
Public or Civic Criminology : A Critique of Loader and Sparks