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Kinds of Order Terms modified by Order Selected AbstractsMAKING ORDER OF DISORDER: A CALL FOR CONCEPTUAL CLARITY*CRIMINOLOGY AND PUBLIC POLICY, Issue 2 2008CHARIS E. KUBRIN First page of article [source] CONFLICT OF RIGHTS AND KEEPING ORDERCRIMINOLOGY AND PUBLIC POLICY, Issue 1 2002PAUL G. CHEVIGNY First page of article [source] BRASSICALES , AN ORDER OF PLANTS CHARACTERISED BY SHARED CHEMISTRYCURTIS'S BOTANICAL MAGAZINE, Issue 3 2010Michael F. Fay Among the many advances in our understanding of angiosperm relationships in recent decades due to the advent of DNA sequence data is the confirmation that all plants (apart from Drypetes) that produce mustard oil precursors are related to each other and should be treated as one order, Brassicales. Due to the lack of obvious shared morphological characters, this is one of the more unexpected of these advances. Here we give the background to this development and introduce the families in Brassicales, including Tropaeolaceae, the subject of this issue. [source] DEFINED ORDER OF EVOLUTIONARY ADAPTATIONS: EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCEEVOLUTION, Issue 7 2008Erez Oxman Organisms often adapt to new conditions by means of beneficial mutations that become fixed in the population. Often, full adaptation requires several different mutations in the same cell, each of which may affect a different aspect of the behavior. Can one predict order in which these mutations become fixed? To address this, we experimentally studied evolution of Escherichia coli in a growth medium in which the effects of different adaptations can be easily classified as affecting growth rate or the lag-phase duration. We find that adaptations are fixed in a defined and reproducible order: first reduction of lag phase, and then an increase of the exponential growth rate. A population genetics theory explains this order, and suggests growth conditions in which the order of adaptations is reversed. We experimentally find this order reversal under the predicted conditions. This study supports a view in which the evolutionary path to adaptation in a new environment can be captured by theory and experiment. [source] DO-NOT-HOSPITALIZE ORDER: IS IT ABSOLUTE?JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 6 2010Tara Shah Bachelor of Nursing No abstract is available for this article. [source] YET ANOTHER NEW RED ALGAL ORDER?JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 4 2002Christine A. Maggs No abstract is available for this article. [source] SMSNA ABSTRACTS IN ORDER OF PRESENTATIONTHE JOURNAL OF SEXUAL MEDICINE, Issue 2009Article first published online: 5 JAN 200 First page of article [source] IMPROVING THE ENFORCEMENT OF RESTRAINING ORDERS AFTER CASTLE ROCK V. GONZALES*FAMILY COURT REVIEW, Issue 2 2007Mandeep Talwar After the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Castle Rock, reliance on domestic violence restraining orders does not offer the solution in and of itself. Our legal system needs to provide greater protection for victims of domestic violence. This note explores ways to use risk assessment tools to augment restraining orders, in addition to examining integrated domestic violence courts that take a proactive approach to aiding victims of abuse. [source] LAST ORDERS: CHOOSING POTTERY FOR FUNERALS IN ROMAN ESSEXOXFORD JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 1 2005EDWARD BIDDULPH Summary. This paper examines ceramic vessels from Roman-period funerary contexts in Essex. Using correspondence analysis, it charts changes in the choice of funerary pottery and isolates the elements in pottery assemblages that unite or differentiate sites. The paper finds that the status of sites can be distinguished on ceramic grounds, reflecting cultural differences in life. Jars and beakers are characteristic of settlement cemeteries, while cups are more typical of high-status burials. Flagons and samian ware are common between them. Underlying funerary traditions are rooted in continuity from the Late Iron Age, rather than post-conquest change. The study also suggests that funerary pottery was selected out of the supply intended for domestic use. [source] Comparative Constitutionalism and the Making of A New World OrderCONSTELLATIONS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CRITICAL AND DEMOCRATIC THEORY, Issue 4 2005Vlad F. Perju First page of article [source] Religion, World Order, and Peace: An Indigenous African PerspectiveCROSSCURRENTS, Issue 3 2010Wande Abimbola No abstract is available for this article. [source] Gut content analysis and a new feeding group classification of termitesECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 4 2001S. E. Donovan Summary 1. Gut content analysis of termites was undertaken using microscopical techniques. The 46 study species covered the entire range of taxonomic and feeding forms within the Order. 2. Inter-specific gut contents data were analysed using principal components analysis, placing species along a clear humification gradient based on variations in the amount of silica and plant tissue fragments in the gut. 3. Redundancy analysis was used to find morphological correlates of the observed variation in gut contents. A total of 22 morphological characters (out of 45 candidate characters) were correlated significantly with the gut contents. 4. Three of the 22 significantly correlated characters unambiguously defined feeding groups, which were designated groups I to IV in increasing order of humification of the feeding substrate. Group I contains lower termite dead wood and grass-feeders; group II contains Termitidae with a range of feeding habits including dead wood, grass, leaf litter, and micro-epiphytes; group III contains Termitidae feeding in the organic rich upper layers of the soil; group IV contains the true soil-feeders (again all Termitidae), ingesting apparently mineral soil. These groupings were generally supported statistically in a canonical covariance analysis, although group II apparently represents termite species with a rather wide range of feeding habits. 5. Using existing hypotheses of termite phylogenetic relationships, it seems probable that group I feeders are phylogenetically basal, and that the other groupings have arisen independently on a number of occasions. Soil-feeding (i.e. group III and group IV feeding) may have evolved due to the co-option of faecal material as a fungal substrate by Macrotermitinae-like ancestral forms. As a consequence, these forms would have been constrained to build nest structures from soil and would therefore have passed at least some soil through their guts. [source] Estimating the Fractional Order of Integration of Yields in the Brazilian Fixed Income MarketECONOMIC NOTES, Issue 3 2007Benjamin M. Tabak This paper presents evidence that yields on the Brazilian fixed income market are fractionally integrated, and compares the period before and after the implementation of the Inflation Targeting (IT) regime. The paper employs the commonly used GPH estimator and recently developed wavelets-based estimator of long memory. Empirical results suggest that interest rates are fractionally integrated and that interest rate spreads are fractionally integrated, with a higher order of integration in the period after the implementation of the IT regime. These results have important implications for the development of macroeconomic models for the Brazilian economy and for long-term forecasting. Furthermore, they imply that shocks to interest rates are long-lived. [source] Structured Looseness: Everyday Social Order at an Israeli KindergartenETHOS, Issue 3 2006Deborah Golden In this article, I address notions of social order as these are conveyed to young children in an early education setting. On the basis of an ethnographic account of an Israeli kindergarten, I describe the routine structuring of everyday life at the kindergarten, as well as the ways in which this routine structuring was consistently undermined, primarily by the teacher herself. Specifically, the study shows how the relatively enfeebled routine structuring of daily life facilitated the emergence of alternative models of social order, namely, collective order and personal order embodied by the teacher. The interplay of structure and looseness discerned at the kindergarten is addressed in terms of the institutional distinctiveness of early education settings, as well as with reference to the Israeli sociocultural context. It is suggested that the study of the organization of daily life in early education settings may enrich our understanding of socialization into enduring perceptions of social order and of the sources of its legitimacy. [education, classroom ethnography, children, Israel, kindergarten] [source] Nonquenchable Chemical Order,Disorder Phase Transition in Yttrium OxyfluorideEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2005Igor Levin Abstract A chemical order,disorder polymorphic phase transition in yttrium oxyfluoride (YOF) was studied in situ by X-ray and neutron powder diffraction. The high-temperature form of YOF crystallizes with a cubic Fmm fluorite structure in which the O and F atoms are disordered among the tetrahedrally coordinated sites. The low-temperature form of YOF exhibits rhombohedral Rm symmetry and evolves from the high-temperature form by the phase transition associated with the ordering of the O and F atoms. The transition occurs around 560 °C. The superstructure contains layers of [OY4] and [FY4] tetrahedra alternating along the c -axis of the trigonal cell (parallel to the <111> direction of the parent cubic structure). The ordering of the O and F atoms is accompanied by the significant displacements of the Y, O, and F atoms from their ideal positions in the cubic phase. Bond valence sum calculations indicate considerable bond strain for both O and F in the cubic structure; the strain is relieved in the ordered low-temperature phase. The order,disorder transition in YOF is completely reversible and exhibits fast nonquenchable kinetics. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2005) [source] Acquiring a Community: The Acquis and the Institution of European Legal OrderEUROPEAN LAW JOURNAL, Issue 4 2003Hans Lindahl The emblematic manifestation of this passage, in the framework of the European legal order, is the acquis communautaire: what is the nature of the process that leads from acquired community to acquiring a community? In a first, preparatory, step, it will be argued that determinate conceptions of truth, time and the giving and taking of reason underlie the process of acquiring a European community. These findings are confronted, in a second step, with Antonio Negri's theory of the multitude as a constituent power, which opposes revolutionary self-determination to representation. Deconstructing this massive opposition, this paper explores three ways in which representation is at work in revolutionary self-determination. As will become clear in the course of the debate, instituting (European) community turns on the interval linking and separating law ,and' disorganised civil society. [source] Order of genetic events is critical determinant of aberrations in chromosome count and structureGENES, CHROMOSOMES AND CANCER, Issue 4 2004Christine Fauth A sequential acquisition of genetic events is critical in tumorigenesis. A key step is the attainment of infinite proliferative potential. Acquisition of this immortalization requires the activation of telomerase in addition to other activities, including inactivation of TP53 and the retinoblastoma family of tumor-suppressor proteins. However, the importance of the order in which these genetic events occur has not been established. To address this question, we used a panel of normal mammary fibroblasts and endothelial cultures that were immortalized after transduction with the catalytic subunit of telomerase (hTERT) and a temperature-sensitive mutant of the SV40 large-tumor (tsLT) oncoprotein in different orders in early- and late-passage stocks. These lines were maintained in continuous culture for up to 90 passages, equivalent to >300 population doublings (PDs) post-explantation during 3 years of continuous propagation. We karyotyped the cultures at different passages. Cultures that received hTERT first followed by tsLT maintained a near-diploid karyotype for more than 150 PDs. However, in late-passage stocks (>200 PDs), metaphase cells were mostly aneuploid. In contrast, the reverse order of gene transduction resulted in a marked early aneuploidy and chromosomal instability, already visible after 50 PDs. These results suggest that the order of genetic mutations is a critical determinant of chromosome count and structural aberration events. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Formation of Highly Luminescent Supramolecular Architectures Possessing Columnar Order from Octupolar Oxadiazole Derivatives: Hierarchical Self-Assembly from Nanospheres to Fibrous Gels,ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 13 2009Shinto Varghese Abstract The synthesis and study of the liquid crystalline, photophysical, and aggregation behavior of novel octupolar oxadiazole derivatives are reported. These molecules formed columnar mesophases at elevated temperatures which transformed into a glassy state at ambient temperatures wherein the columnar order was retained. Their spontaneous concentration dependent hierarchical self-assembly from spheres to fibrous gels has been investigated using TEM, SEM, and XRD. Retention of the hexagonal columnar (Colh) order was also observed in the fibrous aggregates. Concentration dependent luminescence spectral studies indicated that the change in morphology from spheres to fibrous aggregates was associated with a shift in chromophore packing from predominantly H -type to J -type aggregates. Time resolved anisotropic investigations revealed that the columnar stacking of molecules in the aggregated state provided a pathway for excitation energy migration to the lower energy J -traps. [source] Japan and the League of Nations: Empire and World Order 1914,1938 , By Thomas W. BurkmanHISTORY, Issue 315 2009PHILIP TOWLE No abstract is available for this article. [source] Twelfth- and Thirteenth-Century Cistercian Exempla Collections: Role, Diffusion, and EvolutionHISTORY COMPASS (ELECTRONIC), Issue 8 2010Stefano Mula The second half of the 12th century witnessed the creation of a number of collections of exempla. The collectors were Cistercian monks, and the most productive of them were either in the monastery of Clairvaux in Burgundy or in one of the monasteries in Clairvaux's filiation. This article discusses the origin, diffusion and evolution of the early collections (ca. 1160,1225), and analyzes the role of the exemplum inside the Cistercian Order, but also its place in the tradition of short narrative texts. The Cistercian exempla were meant for internal consumption, in order to create a common and shared memory for the members of the order. The success of the exempla was such that the preaching orders saw their potential and created their own collections as tools for preachers in the 13th century. [source] The Department of Education Battle, 1918,1932: Public Schools, Catholic Schools, and the Social Order by Douglas J. SlawsonHISTORY OF EDUCATION QUARTERLY, Issue 2 2008NANCY TAYLOR No abstract is available for this article. [source] Tuning Crystalline Solid-State Order and Charge Transport via Building-Block Modification of OligothiophenesADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 36 2009Colin Reese The packing structure of a series of oligothiophenes is tuned via terminal substitution (see figure). The structural changes dramatically alter intermolecular interactions and charge-transport properties, as measured by elastomeric single-crystal field-effect transistors. Electronic structure calculations reveal the sensitivity of the transport efficiency to orbital nodal alignment, as correlated to the observed trend in field-effect mobilities. [source] Those Who "Witness the Evil"HYPATIA, Issue 1 2003SHERENE RAZACK For the better part of the last decade, Canadian peacekeepers have been encouraged to frame their activities in Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo and Croatia as encounters with "absolute evil." Peacekeeping is seen as a moral project in which the North civilizes the South. Using the Canadian peacekeeping context, I reflect on President Bush's use of the phrase "axis of evil" in the New World Order. 1 argue that this phrase reveals an epistemology structured by notions of the civilized (White) North and the barbaric (Racialized) South. These racial underpinnings give the concept of an "axis of evil" its currency in countries of the North. [source] Paint and Pedagogy: Anton Ehrenzweig and the Aesthetics of Art EducationINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ART & DESIGN EDUCATION, Issue 3 2009Beth Williamson Anton Ehrenzweig's work training art teachers at Goldsmiths College in London was groundbreaking in its field. The work of the studio fed back into Ehrenzweig's writings through his reflections on teaching and the work produced in end of year shows. In The Hidden Order of Art (1967), he theorised the creative process in psychoanalytic terms and elsewhere likened the task of the art teacher to that of a psychotherapist. In this article I argue that, by taking psychoanalytic art theory into the teaching studio, Ehrenzweig provided a psychic space within which students were freed from convention and encouraged to pursue their own practice. [source] Photoinduced Formation of Wrinkled Microstructures with Long-Range Order in Thin Oxide Films,ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 24 2007M. Takahashi Thin oxide films with long-range ordered microstructures were fabricated by a wrinkling process initiated by photopolymerization. The faster polymerization of the film surface generates a buckling effect to create patterns in the films. The removal of the organic polymer by thermal treatment leaves titania microstructures having long-range order. This method of producing micropatterned structures can find several applications in photonics. [source] Low Molecular Weight Gelators with Hexagonal Order in Their Liquid-Crystal Phases and Gel States: 5-Cyano-2-(3,4,5-trialkoxybenzoylamino)tropones,ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 10 2003M. Hashimoto 5-Cyano-2-(3,4,5-trialkoxybenzoylamino)tropones form hexagonal structures in both liquid-crystalline and gel states. The Figure shows an environmental scanning electron microscopy image of octanol gels. Hydrogen bonding between the tropone carbonyl group and the NH group of troponoid amides plays an important role in flattening the molecules, allowing tighter packing structures and more stable columnar mesophases and gel states. [source] An assessment of pharmaceutical inspection reports from nursing and residential homes for the elderly in Northern IrelandINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACY PRACTICE, Issue 3 2004Anna K. Schweizer Phd student Objectives To highlight issues currently being inspected in nursing, residential and dual-registered homes (care homes) for the elderly in Northern Ireland as part of a pharmaceutical inspection. Methods A cross-sectional survey and analysis of reports from pharmaceutical inspections in Northern Ireland care homes between January 1999 and December 2000 was undertaken, using reports provided by the four Registration and Inspection Units (R & I Units 1,4) within the region. Reports were reviewed and all recommendations made by inspectors were classified into 11 main categories. Binary logistic regression was used to examine possible relationships between the type of home (nursing, residential or dual-registered) or the R & I unit and the recommendations made by the inspectors, with corresponding odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals. Key findings Reports from 415 homes (one report per home) formed the final sample for analysis. Each R & I unit used different documentation to conduct a pharmaceutical inspection. Homes received the majority of recommendations from inspectors in the categories ,Records' (66.7% of all homes), ,Policies and protocols' (39.3%) and ,Medication' (31.8%). More recommendations in a number of categories emanated from R & I unit 4 compared with R & I unit 1 (referent). Dual-registered homes (those registered as a nursing and residential facility) were more likely to receive a recommendation in the categories ,Storage of medicine', ,Order and receipt of medication' and ,Equipment' than nursing or residential homes. Conclusion Inspections of care homes should be standardised in terms of documentation used and facilities should be given guidance on issues that are likely to result in recommendations from inspectors. In the longer-term, pharmaceutical inspections should move from a focus on structure/process measures to those that emphasise quality in prescribing. [source] Global Order, US Hegemony and Military Integration: The Canadian-American Defense RelationshipINTERNATIONAL POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY, Issue 4 2008Bruno Charbonneau This article argues that the contemporary IR literature on global order and American hegemony has limitations. First, the critical discourse on hegemony fails to adequately examine the deeply embedded nature of regularized practices that are often a key component of the acceptance of certain state and social behaviours as natural. Second, much of the (neo)Gramscian literature has given primacy to the economic aspects of hegemonic order at the expense of examining global military/security relations. Lastly, much of the literature on global order and hegemony has failed to fully immerse itself within a detailed research program. This article presents an historical sociology of Canada-US defense relations so as to argue that the integrated nature of this relationship is key to understanding Canada's role in American hegemony, and how authoritative narratives and practices of "military integration" become instrumental and persuasive in establishing a "commonsensical" worldview. The effects of such integration are especially clear in times of perceived international crisis. Our historical analysis covers Canada's role during the Cuban missile crisis, Operation Apollo after 9/11, and the current war in Afghanistan. [source] Space, Boundaries, and the Problem of Order: A View from Systems TheoryINTERNATIONAL POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY, Issue 3 2007Jan Helmig The idea our global polity is chiefly divided by territorially organized nation-states captures contemporary constellations of power and authority only insufficiently. Through a decoupling of power and the state, political spaces no longer match geographical spaces. Instead of simply acknowledging a challenge to the state, there is the need to rethink the changing meaning of space for political processes. The paper identifies three aspects, a reconceptualization of the spatial assumptions that IR needs to address: the production of space, the constitutive role of boundaries, and the problem of order. With this contribution, we argue that one avenue in understanding the production of space and the following questions of order is by converging systems theory and critical geopolitics. While the latter has already developed a conceptual apparatus to analyze the production of space, the former comes with an encompassing theoretical background, which takes "world society" as the starting point of analysis. In this respect, nation states are understood as a form of internal differentiation of a wider system, namely world society. [source] Order Flow Patterns around Seasoned Equity Offerings and their Implications for Stock Price Movements,INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCE, Issue 1-2 2005SAHN-WOOK HUH ABSTRACT In this study, we employ order imbalance measures to provide evidence that there is cross-sectional heterogeneity in investor reactions to seasoned equity offerings (SEOs). The normally positive relation between imbalances and returns disappears for trade number imbalances but remains intact for dollar imbalances following SEOs. The return-imbalance delinkage is most pronounced for SEO stocks in which institutions (non-institutions) are net sellers (buyers). We also find that the SEO portfolio in which large institutional investors are net sellers strongly underperforms the complementary portfolio in which they are net buyers. [source] |