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Characteristics of Domestic Violence: The Controversy over Age or is It Something Else?Massey-Hight, Constance L. January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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DEVELOPING A SUPPORTIVE LIVING ENVIRONMENT FOR SURVIVORS OF INTIMATE-PARTNER VIOLENCE AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCEMcCoy, Joyce Ann 05 October 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Domestic Violence: Men as VictimsJenkins, Stephanie A. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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A study of the Ohio lamb marketing structure, with particular emphasis on competitive bidding versus negotiated pricing systems /Brunthaver, Caroll Grant January 1960 (has links)
No description available.
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A mathematical method of locating livestock markets in Ohio to minimize average total cost of transportation and market operation /Miller, Edgar Allen January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
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A chromosome study of pigs derived from irradiated male swine and semen.Zartman, David Lester January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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Drug residues in food producing animals /Mercer, Henry Dwight January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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L'obligation alimentaire en droit international privé québécois et comparé. --Groffier, Ethel. January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Domestic sourcing by foreign-owned subsidiariesMcDonald, Frank, Williams, D., Tüselmann, H-J., Turner, C. January 2008 (has links)
Yes / This paper investigates the development of domestic sourcing by foreign-owned subsidiaries
(FOS) in the UK. The regional development and international-business literatures are used to develop
a conceptual framework on the links between autonomy, the use of networks, and domestic sourcing.
Data from a survey of German, French, and US FOS in the UK is used to test the model. The results
indicate that increased use of networks and increased operational decision-making autonomy are
associated with increased domestic sourcing, but that only a minority of FOS are increasing their
use of domestic sourcing. The growing importance of global sourcing is considered as a possible
explanation for the low proportion of FOS that are increasing their use of domestic sourcing. The
implications for regional-development policy of the findings are also assessed.
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Artful systems : investigating everyday practices of family life to inform the design of information technology for the homeSwan, Laurel M. January 2010 (has links)
The research in this thesis was motivated by an interest in understanding the work and effort that goes into organising family homes, with the aim of informing the design of novel information technology for the home. It was undertaken to address a notable absence of in-depth research into domestic information and communication technology in the fields of Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW). To that end, this thesis presents an ethnographic study of everyday routines in thirteen family homes. Following an established tradition within HCI and CSCW, the study applies qualitative fieldwork methods as a means to investigate and interpret the empirical materials. Periods of extended observation and semi-structured interviews with the thirteen families over a three-year period form the basis of the empirical material. The materials are analysed using a hybrid perspective composed of a combination of influences from the study of material culture, to interaction analysis and ethnography. The hybrid analytical perspective draws out insights regarding the families’ mundane practices and the artfully devised solutions they use to organise daily life. Four household activities and artefacts are given specific focus: (i) household list making, (ii) the display qualities of refrigerator doors, (iii) the organisation of household clutter, and (iv) the devising of bespoke solutions in organising home life. Broader findings include the observations that people tailor solutions to meet their needs, that optimum efficiency is not the pre-eminent determinant in what method or artefact people choose to organise themselves and their homes, and that homes determine their individual characters in part by how everyday tasks and organisation are accomplished. In short, the personal qualities of these mundane practices are part of what makes a home a home. These findings are used to elicit implications for information technology design, with the aim of encouraging designers of domestic technology to be aware of and respectful towards the idiosyncratic nature of the home, and, wherever possible, to design in such a way as to allow the technology to be appropriated for families’ bespoke tailoring. To evaluate and address this point, two design projects, one on augmented magnets and another on a “media bowl”, are used to develop and test out this approach. Both projects are critically examined to reflect on the efficacy of the design approach and what lessons might be learnt for future studies and design exercises. The combination of detailed ethnographic fieldwork on family homes combined with the development of experimental design projects is intended to deepen the understanding of the mundane behaviours and everyday routines of family homes, in order to better inform the design of information technology for the home.
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