Results for 'David Britain'

957 found
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  1.  16
    Promoting Socially Responsible Business, Ethical Trade and Acceptable Labour Standards.David Lewis, Great Britain & Social Development Systems for Coordinated Poverty Eradication - 2000
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  2. Language/dialect contact.David Britain - 2005 - In Keith Brown (ed.), Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Elsevier. pp. 6--651.
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  3.  13
    Poet, Priest and Prophet: The Life and Thought of Bishop John V. Taylor.David Wood & Churches Together in Britain and Ireland - 2002
    John V. Taylor was a missionary statesman, ecumenist, Africanist, onetime General Secretary of the Church Missionary Society, and later Anglican Bishop of Winchester. His work offers a theology and practice of Christian mission which is faithful to scripture while fully facing the facts of the contemporary world at the beginning of the third millennium. Does Christian evangelism promote sectarianism and violence, or can it contribute to harmony and peace in the global village? Can Christians extol the true significance of Jesus (...)
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  4.  41
    Medical care in Britain before the welfare state.David G. Green - 1993 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 7 (4):479-495.
    In Britain before 1911, the vast majority of the population provided medical care for themselves and had evolved a variety of schemes that checked the power of organized medicine and encouraged a steady improvement in standards. The evidence is that at the end of the nineteenth century about 5–6 percent of the population relied on the poor law, 10–15 percent on free care from charitable institutions, 75 percent on mutual aid, and the remainder paid fees to private doctors.
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  5.  31
    David Elliston Allen, The Naturalist in Britain: A Social History. [REVIEW]David Elliston Allen - 1997 - Journal of the History of Biology 30 (3):493-494.
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  6.  8
    A History of Atheism in Britain: From Hobbes to Russell.David Berman - 1988 - Routledge.
    Probably no doctrine has excited as much horror and abuse as atheism. This first history of British atheism, first published in 1987, tries to explain this reaction while exhibiting the development of atheism from Hobbes to Russell. Although avowed atheism appeared surprisingly late – 1782 in Britain – there were covert atheists in the middle seventeenth century. By tracing its development from so early a date, Dr Berman gives an account of an important and fascinating strand of intellectual history.
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  7.  9
    Wordsmiths and Warriors: The English-Language Tourist's Guide to Britain.David Crystal & Hilary Crystal - 2013 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Wordsmiths and Warriors explores the heritage of English through the places in Britain that shaped it. It unites the warriors, whose invasions transformed the language, with the poets, scholars, reformers, and others who helped create its character. David and Hilary Crystal drove thousands of miles to locations throughout Britain, David providing the descriptions, Hilary the full-colour photographs. Their book reflects the language's history starting with Anglo-Saxon arrivals and ending in London with apps for grammar. In between (...)
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  8.  13
    The History of Great Britain: The Reigns of James I and Charles I.David Hume & Duncan Forbes - 1970
    "Hume's History of Great Britain, published in the middle of the eighteenth century, remained the standard work for well over a century. It is a masterpeice, even if its author is now better known for A treatise on human nature. Grounded on an almost sociological view of the 'progress of society', Hume's is perhaps the most European of all the classic narrative histories of Britain. Moreover it embraces far more than the merely political, and it was Adam Smith (...)
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  9.  52
    (1 other version)The history of science in Britain: A personal view.David M. Knight - 1984 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 15 (2):343-353.
    Summary Historians of science in Britain lack a firm institutional base. They are to be found scattered around in various departments in universities, polytechnics and museums. Their history over the last thirty-five years can be seen as a series of flirtations with those in more-established disciplines. Beginning with scientists, they then turned to philosophers, moving on to historians and then to sociologists: from each of these affairs something was learned, and the current interest determined which aspects of the history (...)
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  10.  10
    A History of Atheism in Britain, from Hobbes to Russell.David Berman - 1988 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 185 (4):512-513.
  11.  32
    Mannered science and political identity: Joe Bord: Science and Whig manners: science and political style in Britain c.1790–1850. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, 2009, pp. ix + 213, £50.00 HB.David Philip Miller - 2010 - Metascience 19 (1):133-135.
  12.  56
    Claudian’s Britain and Empire, 395–402 c.e. [REVIEW]David R. Carlson - 2013 - American Journal of Philology 134 (2):305-336.
    At its dissolution, the western empire of the Romans found a non-Roman poet to eulogise the empire’s power: Claudius Claudianus (d. 404). In Claudian’s representations of the empire, Britain had a special place, a comprehensive survey shows, as the exotic edge of Rome’s dominion, at once the end of earth as well as beyond it, another world altogether. Although unconcerned with historical veracity, evidently, Claudian’s characterisations of Britain had this literary-symbolic value: in Claudian, Britain’s conquest stood for (...)
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  13.  5
    Medieval archaeology in Britain fifth to eleventh centuries.David Alban Hinton - 2010 - In Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy. Oxford University Press.
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  14.  14
    Making Meaning: Inference and Rhetoric in the Interpretation of Cinema.David Bordwell - 1989 - Harvard University Press.
    David Bordwell's new book is at once a history of film criticism, an analysis of how critics interpret film, and a proposal for an alternative program for film studies. It is an anatomy of film criticism meant to reset the agenda for film scholarship. As such Making Meaning should be a landmark book, a focus for debate from which future film study will evolve. Bordwell systematically maps different strategies for interpreting films and making meaning, illustrating his points with a (...)
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  15.  20
    Thinking Matter: Materialism in Eighteenth‐Century Britain.David Berman - 1985 - Philosophical Books 26 (2):85-87.
  16.  12
    The Province of Legislation Determined: Legal Theory in Eighteenth-Century Britain.David Lieberman - 2002 - Cambridge University Press.
    A comprehensive account of English legal thought in the age of Blackstone and Bentham for nearly a century, The Province of Legislation Determined advances an ambitious reinterpretation of eighteenth-century attitudes to social change and law reform. Professor Lieberman's bold synthesis rests on a wide survey of legal materials and on a detailed discussion of Blackstone's Commentaries, the jurisprudence of Lord Kames and the Scottish Enlightenment, the chief justiceship of Lord Mansfield, the penal theories of Eden and Romilly, and the legislative (...)
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  17.  44
    Animal psychology and ethology in Britain and the emergence of professional concern for the concept of ethical cost.David A. H. Wilson - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 33 (2):235-262.
    It has been argued that if an animal is psychologically like us, there may be more scientific reason to experiment upon it, but less moral justification to do so. Some scientists deny the existence of this dilemma, claiming that although there are scientifically valuable similarities between humans and animals that make experimentation worthwhile, humans are at the same time unique and fundamentally different. This latter response is, ironically, typical of pre-Darwinian beliefs in the relationship between human and non-human animals. Another (...)
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  18.  13
    David Lincicum: Fighting Germans with Germans: Victorian Theological Translations between Anxiety and Influence.David Lincicum - 2017 - Journal for the History of Modern Theology/Zeitschrift für Neuere Theologiegeschichte 24 (2):153-201.
    Between 1825 and 1895, Victorian Britain witnessed a significant blossoming of interest in foreign theological literature. Much of this interest, together with a concomitant anxiety, focused on the negotiation of German biblical criticism and the new challenges and possibilities this criticism introduced. This article thematizes this transnational literary and theological encounter, paying particular attention both to the major book series that undertook to mediate (especially German) criticism to Britain, and to the burgeoning periodical literature that supplied ’foreign intelligence’ (...)
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  19.  20
    An Imperial Vision: Indian Architecture and Britain's Raj.David Kopf & Thomas R. Metcalfe - 1992 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 112 (4):672.
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  20.  22
    Of Design and Dining Clubs: Geography in America and Britain, 1770–1860.David N. Livingstone - 1991 - History of Science 29 (2):153-183.
  21.  28
    Testing Power and Trust: The Steam Indicator, the ‘Reynolds Controversy’, and the Relations of Engineering Science and Practice in Late Nineteenth-Century Britain.David Philip Miller - 2012 - History of Science 50 (2):212-250.
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  22.  9
    Medieval archaeology in Britain twelfth to fifteenth centuries.David A. Hinton - 2010 - In Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy. Oxford University Press.
  23.  22
    Agriculture and chemistry in Britain around 1800.David Knight - 1976 - Annals of Science 33 (2):187-196.
    This paper is concerned with the application of science to a practical activity. The story begins in the late eighteenth century, a period of agricultural innovation, with various authors urging that definite chemical knowledge should replace rule of thumb in the application of fertilisers. In the work of Archibald Cochrane, ninth Earl of Dundonald, we find this exhortation beginning to give way to descriptions of actual chemical experiments, and interpretations of equilibria in the soil. But it is only with Davy's (...)
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  24. Racial Prejudice and the Performing Animals Controversy in Early Twentieth-Century Britain.David Wilson - 2009 - Society and Animals 17 (2):149-165.
    This paper attempts to show how racial prejudice and selective, usually inarticulate, racial discrimination influenced attempts to conduct an objective examination of charges of cruelty in the training and exhibition of performing animals in Britain in the early twentieth century. As the debate intensified, and following the appointment of a parliamentary Select Committee, one explanation often given by both sides for shortcomings in the treatment of performing animals was the alleged cruelty particularly or exclusively attributable to the “alien enemy,” (...)
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  25. C. Steedman, Childhood, Culture and Class in Britain[REVIEW]David Archard - 1990 - Radical Philosophy 56:44.
  26. Constitutionalism and Democracy; Debating the Constitution; Associative Democracy; Common Sense: A New Constitution for Britain[REVIEW]David Archard - 1995 - Radical Philosophy 71.
     
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  27.  23
    Marie Hicks. Programmed Inequality: How Britain Discarded Women Technologists and Lost Its Edge in Computing. x + 342 pp., figs., bibl., index. Cambridge, Mass./London: MIT Press, 2017. $37. [REVIEW]David Alan Grier - 2018 - Isis 109 (2):436-437.
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  28.  27
    Distributing Discovery' between Watt and Cavendish: A Reassessment of the Nineteenth-Century 'Water Controversy.David Philip Miller - 2002 - Annals of Science 59 (2):149-178.
    Contention about who discovered the compound nature of water (the 'water controversy') occurred in two phases. During the first phase, in the 1780s, the claimants to the discovery (Antoine Lavoisier, Henry Cavendish, and James Watt) produced the work on which their claims were based. This phase of controversy was relatively short and did not generate much heat, although it was part of the larger debates surrounding the 'chemical revolution'. The second phase of controversy, in the 1830s and 1840s, saw heated (...)
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  29.  10
    THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN - (R.) Hingley Conquering the Ocean. The Roman Invasion of Britain. Pp. xiv + 312, ills, maps. New York: Oxford University Press, 2022. Cased, £22.99, US$29.95. ISBN: 978-0-19-093741-6. [REVIEW]David Bird - 2023 - The Classical Review 73 (1):296-298.
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  30.  19
    "Pacific" Ethno-National Identities: Victims, Persecutors, and the Quest for Identity.David García-Ramos Gallego & David Atienza de Frutos - 2021 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 28 (1):171-200.
    The processes of globalization, embraced with such eagerness in the 1990s, started being reviewed a decade later, having revealed a vicious underside. Behind the diverse masks of globalization hide murderous identities that promise different types of violence. During Brexit, the referendum in June 2016 that was to decide whether the United Kingdom left the European Union or stayed in it, Britain rejected what the EU represents—a common identity—to pursue a road on its own—a separate identity.1 Significantly, one of the (...)
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  31.  23
    Experimental Animal Behaviour Studies: The Loss of Initiative in Britain 100 Years Ago.David Ah Wilson - 2002 - History of Science 40 (3):291-320.
  32.  89
    Spirituality as a natural phenomenon: Bringing biological and psychological perspectives together.David Hay & Pawel M. Socha - 2005 - Zygon 40 (3):589-612.
    Working in Britain and in Poland, the authors independently arrived at an interpretation of spirituality as a natural phenomenon. From the point of view of the British author, spirituality is based on a biological predisposition that has been selected for in the process of evolution because it has survival value. In several important ways this approach is in harmony with the psychological perspective of the Polish author that sees spirituality as a socioculturally structured and determined attempt to cope with (...)
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  33.  41
    Mixed messages in education policy: Sign of the times?David Hartley - 1994 - British Journal of Educational Studies 42 (3):230-244.
    The education policy of Conservative governments in Britain since 1979 is sometimes said to be contradictory. It purports to empower the consumer, but legislation has given the lie to this, vesting ever greater powers in central government, less so in Scotland, the more so in England and Wales. In short, education policy contains mixed messages, or contradictions. But these contradictions to some extent express the tensions which have become apparent in an age of transition: that between the modern and (...)
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  34. Contesting the plot : Environmental politics and the urban allotment garden in Britain and japan.Richard Wiltshire, David Crouch & Ren Azuma - 2000 - In Philip Anthony Stott & Sian Sullivan (eds.), Political ecology: science, myth and power. New York: Oxford University Press.
  35. The Erosion of Childhood, Child Oppression in Britain 1860-1918. [REVIEW]David Archard - 1992 - Radical Philosophy 62.
  36.  49
    Etruscan Museum Pieces (N.T.) De Grummond Corpus Speculorum Etruscorum: Great Britain 3. Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, Claydon House, Pitt Rivers Museum. Edited by T. Rasmussen and J. Swaddling. Pp. 165, ills. Rome: 'L'Erma' di Bretschneider, 2007. Cased, €160. ISBN 978-88-8265-443-6. (P.) Perkins Etruscan Bucchero in the British Museum. (British Museum Research Publication 165.) Pp. iv + 136, ills. London: British Museum Press, 2007. Paper, £30.00. ISBN: 978-086159-165-. [REVIEW]David Ridgway - 2009 - The Classical Review 59 (2):594-.
  37.  21
    Jack Morrell, science, culture and politics in Britain, 1750–1870. Variorum collected studies series, cs567. Aldershot: Ashgate, 1997. Pp. XII+336. Isbn 0-86078-633-1. £52.50. [REVIEW]David Riley - 2000 - British Journal for the History of Science 33 (3):369-379.
  38.  30
    Peter J. Bowler. Science For All: The Popularization of Science in Early Twentieth‐Century Britain. x + 339 pp., app., bibl., index. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009. $45. [REVIEW]David Knight - 2010 - Isis 101 (2):437-438.
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  39.  23
    Indonesian Manuscripts in Great Britain: A Catalogue of Manuscripts in Indonesian Lanuages in British Public Collections.David H. de Queljoe, M. C. Ricklefs & P. Voorhoeve - 1979 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 99 (3):509.
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  40.  10
    Some characteristics of intentionally childless wives in Britain.Frances Baum & David R. Cope - 1980 - Journal of Biosocial Science 12 (3):287-300.
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  41.  21
    Propositional Analyis [review of Graham Stevens, The Russellian Origins of Analytical Philosophy ].David Blitz - 2009 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 29 (1):76-84.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:76 Reviews PROPOSITIONAL ANALYSIS David Blitz Philosophy Dept. and Peace Studies / Central Connecticut State U. New Britain, ct 06050, usa [email protected] Graham Stevens. The Russellian Origins of Analytical Philosophy: Bertrand Russell and the Unity of the Proposition. London and New York: Routledge, 2005. Pp. xii, 185. isbn: 978-0-415-36044-9 (hb). £80.00. us$155.95. Graham Stevens has written a short book on a diUcult subject: the unity of the (...)
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  42.  11
    How Ought War To Be Remembered in Schools?David Aldridge - 2014 - Impact 2014 (21):1-45.
    Each year a national day of commemoration of the war dead is celebrated on 11th November in the United Kingdom. Despite public controversy about the nature and purpose of remembrance, there has been no significant discussion of the role schools should play in this event. In this centenary year of the outbreak of the First World War, with the government planning to send groups from every secondary school in Britain to tour the battlefields of the western front over the (...)
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  43.  11
    Ecology and Exchange in the Andes.David Lehmann (ed.) - 2007 - Cambridge University Press.
    For centuries Andean civilization and ecology has afforded a special fascination for European travellers and officials. In this volume, eight writers - anthropologists, economists and historians working in Bolivia, Britain, France, Ireland and Peru - describe and analyse aspects of rural society in various Andean regions. They focus on the impact of capitalist development on both the peasant economy and the landed elite in the Andes and the ways in which that impact has been shaped by a specific Andean (...)
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  44. Is there a logical slippery slope from voluntary to nonvoluntary euthanasia?David Albert Jones - 2011 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 21 (4):379-404.
    Slippery slope arguments have been important in the euthanasia debate for at least half a century. In 1957 the Cambridge legal scholar Glanville Williams wrote a controversial book, The Sanctity of Life and the Criminal Law, in which he presented the decriminalizing of euthanasia as a modern liberal proposal taking its rightful place alongside proposals to decriminalize contraception, sterilization, abortion, and attempted suicide (all of which the book also advocated).1 Opposition to these reforms was in turn presented as exclusively religious (...)
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  45.  13
    Peripheral and central: Dan Charly Christensen: Hans Christian Ørsted: Reading nature’s mind: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013, 743pp, £41.99 HB.David Knight - 2014 - Metascience 24 (1):103-105.
    Oersted has been a puzzle for historians of science. Unflatteringly regarded by contemporaries in Britain and France as a metaphysician, he astonished and galvanised the learned world in 1820 with his discovery of electromagnetism. Suddenly famous, he was belatedly honoured; but, like Röntgen with X-rays, did no more serious work on the discovery that brought him renown, leaving that to Ampère and Faraday while he concentrated on an aesthetics that would bridge arts and sciences, and on building up scientific (...)
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  46.  20
    Agrarian (In) Equality (and Dependency) vs Commerce and Liberty: Reconsidering the Relation between Constitutional Government and Economic Inequality in the American Republic.David Lewis Schaefer - 2019 - The European Legacy 24 (7):769-788.
    I. Accompanying the rise of professed socialists to political prominence in the United States and Britain, a growing academic literature, spearheaded by French economist Thomas Piketty’s bestsellin...
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  47.  20
    Anglo-american land law: Diverging developments from a shared history - part I: The shared history.David A. Thomas - unknown
    This series of three articles describes the history of land law shared by the British and American legal systems, and how and why these legal traditions have diverged from each other in modern times. This Article - part 1 in this series - describes the emerging customs and laws regarding land rights among early inhabitants of Britain, and how succeeding invasions and occupation by Celtic, Roman, Germanic, and Norman peoples altered these customs and laws. The Article details the profound (...)
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  48. Philosophy and ideology in Hume's political thought.David Miller - 1981 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book was written with three aims in mind. The first was to provide a reasonably concise account of Hume's social and political thought that might help students coming to it for the first time. The second aim was to say something about the relationship between philosophy and politics, with explicit attention to Hume, but implicit reference to a general issue. The third is to offer an integrated account of Hume's thought. The book accounts for the varying interpretation of the (...)
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  49.  53
    Book briefly noted.David Lamb, Sadhbh O' Neill, Alan P. F. Sell, Patrick Gorevan, Feargal Murphy & Brendan Purcell - 1997 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 5 (1):138 – 146.
    Introducing Applied Ethics Edited by Brenda Almond, Blackwell, 1995. Pp. 375. ISBN 0-631-19389-8. 45.00 (hbk), 14.99 (pbk). Environmental Ethics Edited by Robert Elliot, Oxford University Press, 1995. Pp. 255. ISBN 9-19-875144-3. 9.95 (pbk) Medicine and Moral Reasoning Edited by K.W.M. Fulford, Grant Gillett and Janet Martin Soskice Cambridge University Press, 1994. Pp. 207. ISBN 0-521-45325-9 37.50 (hbk), 12.95 (pbk). Enlightenment and Religion. Rational Dissent in Eighteenth-century Britain Edited by Knud Haakonssen, Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. xii + 348. ISBN (...)
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  50.  45
    ‘The jobs all go to foreigners’: a critical discourse analysis of the Labour Party's ‘left-wing’ case for immigration controls.David Bates - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (2):183-199.
    This paper critically examines how senior figures in the UK Labour Party and wider labour movement discussed the topic of immigration in the immediate aftermath of the UK's vote to leave the European Union in 2016. Influenced by the Discourse Historical Approach, the paper is based on an analysis of 86 public interventions by Labour figures, over a 6-month period, delivered in speeches, articles and essays. The paper examines argumentative strategies adopted by Labour figures – including Members of Parliament, advisors (...)
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