Results for 'Family Names'

977 found
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  1.  48
    Family Name and Social Class.Gunnar Boalt - 1951 - Theoria 17 (1-3):1-12.
  2.  27
    Kuwabara's Misleading Thesis on Bukhara and the Family Name an 安Kuwabara's Misleading Thesis on Bukhara and the Family Name an.Antonino Forte - 1996 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 116 (4):645.
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  3.  44
    The Origin of Immanuel Kant's Family Name.Ronald King Murray - 2008 - Kantian Review 13 (1):190-193.
  4.  28
    The naming of children in same-sex families.Jérôme Courduriès - 2017 - Clio 45:151-169.
    Le Code civil français, depuis juin 2013, permet aux couples de même sexe de se marier, d’adopter conjointement, et de recourir à l’adoption de l’enfant du conjoint. Malgré ces changements juridiques considérables, nombre de situations parentales sont difficilement prises en considération. Tel est le cas, par exemple, lorsque des couples de femmes recourent à une reproduction assistée avec don de sperme ou lorsque des couples d’hommes recourent à une gestation pour autrui, tous ces couples ayant élaboré conjointement le projet de (...)
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  5.  65
    Common names and "family resemblances".Haig Khatchadourian - 1957 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 18 (3):341-358.
  6.  6
    Personal names, identity and family in Benedictine Reform England.Catherine Cubitt - 2014 - In Karl Ubl & Steffen Patzold (eds.), Verwandtschaft, Name Und Soziale Ordnung. De Gruyter. pp. 223-242.
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  7. Wittgenstein on Names and Family Resemblances.Michael Hymers - 1990 - Eidos: The Canadian Graduate Journal of Philosophy 9 (1):11-30.
    This paper (published in Eidos: The Canadian Graduate Journal of Philosophy, not Revista Filosofia de la Universidad del Norte) elaborates and defends Renford Bambrough's contention that Wittgenstein's discussion of family resemblances dissolves the traditional problem of universals, without slipping into either nominalism of realism.
     
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  8.  22
    Family Nomenclature and Same-Name Divinities in Roman Religion and Mythology.Lora Holland - 2011 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 104 (2):211-226.
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  9.  47
    A Rose by Any Other Name: Are Family Firms Named After Their Founding Families Rewarded More for Their New Product Introductions?Saim Kashmiri & Vijay Mahajan - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 124 (1):81-99.
    The authors explore the relation between the way different family firms are named, and the shareholder value impact of these firms’ new product introductions. Using an event study of 1,294 product introduction announcements of 107 publicly listed U.S. family firms, the authors find that the presence of the founding family’s name as part of a family firm’s name acts as a valuable firm resource, increasing the abnormal stock returns surrounding the firm’s new product introductions. Superior returns (...)
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  10.  20
    In the name of the family? Against parents’ refusal to disclose prognostic information to children.Michael Rost & Emilian Mihailov - 2021 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (3):421-432.
    Parents frequently attempt to shield their children from distressing prognostic information. Pediatric oncology providers sometimes follow parental request for non-disclosure of prognostic information to children, invoking what we call the stability of the family argument. They believe that if they inform the child about terminal prognosis despite parental wishes, cohesion and family structure will be severely hampered. In this paper, we argue against parental request for non-disclosure. Firstly, we present the stability of the family argument in more (...)
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  11.  25
    Family involvement in nursing homes: an interpretative synthesis of literature.Nina Hovenga, Elleke Landeweer, Sytse Zuidema & Carlo Leget - 2022 - Nursing Ethics 29 (6):1530-1544.
    Background Family involvement in nursing homes is generally recognized as highly valuable for residents, staff and family members. However, family involvement continues to be challenging in practice. Aim To contribute to the dialogue about family involvement and develop strategies to improve family involvement in the nursing home. Methods This interpretative synthesis consists of a thematic analysis and care ethical interpretation of issues regarding family involvement from the perspective of families in nursing homes reported in (...)
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  12.  18
    ‘Not in our name without us’ – The intervention of Catholic Women Speak at the Synod of Bishops on the Family: A case study of a global resistance movement by Catholic women.Nontando Hadebe - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (1).
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  13.  65
    On chasm (Paper written by Yu Luoke under the pen name the Beijing-Family-Background-Study-Group).L. K. Yu - 2004 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 35 (4):76-90.
    Editor's Note: Over a long period of time, the evil bourgeois reactionary line has created antagonism between two groups of students in schools—antagonism on the basis of one's family background. This antagonism became very obvious during the initial stage of the Cultural Revolution, and has lasted to this day. It has prevented further criticism of the bourgeois reactionary line and hindered further development of the Cultural Revolution.
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  14.  29
    Family Members’ Salience in Family Business: An Identity-Based Stakeholder Approach.Silvana Signori & Yves Fassin - 2021 - Journal of Business Ethics 183 (1):1-21.
    The paper builds on the stakeholder salience framework and applies a social identity approach to explain family firm dynamics and how these could impact on family firm governance and ethics. In particular, we consider the family as the main stakeholder for family firms and we refer to the recent approaches to stakeholder theory based on ‘names-and-faces’ and on social identity to focus on family members at the individual and organizational level. Family businesses offer (...)
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  15.  55
    Familial genetic risks: how can we better navigate patient confidentiality and appropriate risk disclosure to relatives?Edward S. Dove, Vicky Chico, Michael Fay, Graeme Laurie, Anneke M. Lucassen & Emily Postan - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (8):504-507.
    This article investigates a high-profile and ongoing dilemma for healthcare professionals (HCPs), namely whether the existence of a (legal) duty of care to genetic relatives of a patient is a help or a hindrance in deciding what to do in cases where a patient’s genetic information may have relevance to the health of the patient’s family members. The English caseABC v St George’s Healthcare NHS Trust and othersconsidered if a duty of confidentiality owed to the patient and a putative (...)
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  16.  75
    The naked ‘duchess’: names are titles.Roberta Ballarin - 2019 - Linguistics and Philosophy 42 (4):349-379.
    In her recent defense of predicativism for proper names, Delia Graff Fara proposes the following non-metalinguistic being-called condition for the applicability of names as predicates: A name ‘N’ is true of a thing if and only if it is called N. The BCC is supposed to hold for names only. In this essay I criticize Fara’s BCC by arguing that the word ‘called’ is ambiguous, and that the BCC holds only for the particular sense of ‘calling’ as (...)
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  17.  65
    What does the disturbance of the United Action Committe reveal? A rebuttal of the criticism of" On Family Background" by the Red Guards of the Attached High School of Tsinghua University (Paper written by Yu Luoke under the pen name the Beijing-Family-Background-Study-Group).L. K. Yu - 2004 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 35 (4):60-75.
    In December of last year, a few clowns appeared on the grand and spectacular stage of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. These clowns were the reincarnated ghosts from the Capital Red Guard West City, East City, and Haidian Districts Pickets. They viciously attacked Chairman Mao's revolutionary line, engaged in slander on the Central Cultural Revolution Group, called dear Comrade Jiang Qing names, and sabotaged the organizations under the proletarian dictatorship. They provoked violence, created chaos, searched and confiscated the possessions (...)
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  18.  28
    The Influence of Family Firms and Institutional Owners on Corporate Social Responsibility Performance.Frank C. Butler & Nai H. Lamb - 2018 - Business and Society 57 (7):1374-1406.
    Research on corporate social responsibility has traditionally focused on managerial discretion and stakeholders’ influence. This study extends current research by addressing the effect of family firms and institutional owners on CSR performance, namely, CSR strengths and concerns. Based on stewardship theory and the socioemotional wealth perspective, we propose that family firms are more likely to value CSR performance. Next, drawing from multiple agency theory, we predict that institutional owners, unlike family owners, will influence a firm’s CSR performance (...)
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  19.  21
    Duty to Family: Ethical Considerations in the Resuscitation Bay.Ashley Pavlic, Arthur R. Derse, Nancy Jacobson, Christopher Calciano & Colin Liphart - 2024 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 35 (1):54-58.
    To examine the ethical duty to patients and families in the setting of the resuscitation bay, we address a case with a focus on providing optimal care and communication to family members. We present a case of nonsurvivable traumatic injury in a minor, focusing on how allowing family more time at the bedside impacts the quality of death and what duty exists to maintain an emotionally optimal environment for family grieving and acceptance. Our analysis proposes tenets for (...)
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  20.  10
    Reflections on a COVID death: Naming a family’s pain and reparation.Ann Gallagher - 2021 - Nursing Ethics 28 (5):587-589.
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  21.  13
    My name is Saajin Singh.Kuljinder Kaur Brar - 2022 - Berkeley: Annick Press. Edited by Samrath Kaur.
    A debut picture book that explores the importance of pronouncing names properly and celebrates cultural identity. Saajin loves his name--he loves it so much that he sees it spelled out in the world around him in his snacks, in the sky and sometimes he even sings it aloud. On his first day of school, Saajin is excited to meet his new classmates, but things take a turn when the teacher mispronounces his name as Say-jin and he is not sure (...)
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  22.  21
    Drivers of Philanthropic Foundations in Emerging Markets: Family, Values and Spirituality.Valeria Giacomin & Geoffrey Jones - 2021 - Journal of Business Ethics 180 (1):263-282.
    This article discusses the ethics and drivers of philanthropic foundations in emerging markets. A foundation organizes assets to invest in philanthropic initiatives. Previous scholarship has largely focused on developed countries, especially the United States, and has questioned the ethics behind the activities of foundations, particularly for strategic motives that served wider corporate purposes. We argue that philanthropic foundations in emerging markets have distinctive characteristics that merit separate examination. We scrutinize the ethics behind the longitudinal activity of such foundations using 70 (...)
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  23.  21
    Families and Resemblances.Hans Sluga - 1989 - In Dayton Z. Phillips & Peter G. Winch (eds.), Wittgenstein. Blackwell. pp. 76–94.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Games Form a Family What Is Common to All These Leaves? Expressions Constructed on Analogical Patterns The Human Form of Life Clusters and Families A Case for Methodological Pluralism.
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  24. On" Purity"(A paper written by Yu Luoke under the pen name the Beijing-Family-Background-Study-Group).L. K. Yu - 2004 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 35 (4):56-59.
  25.  14
    Naming Rights? Analysing Child Surname Disputes in Australian Courts Through a Gendered Lens.Zoë Goodall & Ceridwen Spark - 2020 - Feminist Legal Studies 28 (3):237-255.
    Despite major advances in gender equality, patrilineal naming—children being granted their father’s surname—persists as a largely unquestioned norm in those Western countries with predominantly Anglo traditions, even in families where mothers retain their birth names. In Australia, when parents cannot agree on the child’s surname, the issue will go to a court or tribunal, to be decided by a judicial decision-maker. Apart from Jonathan Herring’s work in the UK, such cases have been little examined by scholars. This paper explores (...)
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  26.  22
    The African Renaissance as a reversal of conquest expressed in naming: An Afrocentric engagement.Simphiwe Sesanti - 2018 - South African Journal of Philosophy 37 (4):502-514.
    The African Renaissance is historically an African revolutionary project aimed at reclaiming and reviving African heritage that was destroyed by European slavery and colonialism. One of the manifestations of the African Renaissance was to do away with European names imposed on African countries, and to replace them with African names. While this was a good move, it was a half-measure because it ignored the gender aspect of colonial naming which saw a European cultural legacy of naming women after (...)
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  27.  62
    Four Models of Family Interests.Daniel Groll - 2014 - Pedatrics 134:S81-S86.
    In this article, I distinguish between 4 models for thinking about how to balance the interests of parents, families, and a sick child: (1) the oxygen mask model; (2) the wide interests model; (3) the family interests model; and (4) the direct model. The oxygen mask model – which takes its name from flight attendants' directives to parents to put on their own oxygen mask before putting on their child's – says that parents should consider their own interests only (...)
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  28.  22
    The collagen family members as cell adhesion proteins.Jyrki Heino - 2007 - Bioessays 29 (10):1001-1010.
    The collagen family of extracellular matrix proteins has played a fundamental role in the evolution of multicellular animals. At the present, 28 triple helical proteins have been named as collagens and they can be divided into several subgroups based on their structural and functional properties. In tissues, the cells are anchored to collagenous structures. Often the interaction is indirect and mediated by matrix glycoproteins, but cells also express receptors, which have the ability to directly bind to the triple helical (...)
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  29.  37
    Social and family characteristics of marriage in England and Wales: information derived from marriage registration records.John C. Haskey - 1991 - Journal of Biosocial Science 23 (2):179-200.
    Information on social and family aspects of marriage was obtained from a sample of over a thousand marriages solemnised in England and Wales in 1979. The data include the standard demographic variables concerning the couple and their marriage and also: the day of the week the marriage was celebrated; whether the fathers or relatives of similar surname to the spouses acted as witnesses; the patterns of name usage by brides; the numbers of forenames of the marriage partners and their (...)
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  30.  25
    Combining different activities in family-style group care: How Professional Foster Parents show listenership towards adolescents during dinner related activities.Martine Noordegraaf & Ellen Schep - 2022 - Discourse Studies 24 (3):350-370.
    This research focuses on dinner conversations in family-style group care. Children, who cannot live with their biological families anymore, are given shelter in these family-style group care settings. For the development of an attachment relationship between children and their Professional Foster Parents, it is important that the children feel that they are listened to in order to get an affective and intimate relationship with the parents. In this conversation-analytic research we analysed PFPs’ involvement in multiple activities simultaneously, namely (...)
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  31.  21
    Founding the Wnt gene family: How wingless was found to be a positional signal and oncogene homolog.Nicholas E. Baker - 2024 - Bioessays 46 (2):2300156.
    The Wnt family of developmental regulators were named after the Drosophila segmentation gene wingless and the murine proto‐oncogene int‐1. Homology between these two genes connected oncogenesis to cell‐cell signals in development. I review how wingless was initially characterized, and cloned, as part of the quest to identify developmental cell‐to‐cell signals, based on predictions of the Positional Information Model, and on the properties of homeotic and segmentation gene mutants. The requirements and cell‐nonautonomy of wingless in patterning multiple embryonic and adult (...)
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  32.  49
    On the Names of Aelivs Caesar, Adopted Son Of Hadrian.1.A. S. L. Farquharson - 1908 - Classical Quarterly 2 (1):109-8.
    Historians of the Roman Empire have been nearly unanimous in giving the ill-fated Caesar whom Hadrian designated as his successor the cognomen Verus ascribed to him by Spartianus.2 Following the same biographer Annalists have given the names Aurelius and Annius to his father and grandfather. Noris in his Epistola Consularis3 maintained against Pagi that the original names of this prince were Lucius Ceionius Commodus, that neither he nor any of his family bore the names Aurelius, Annius, (...)
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  33. Behavioural Psychology of Unique Family Firms Toward R&D Investment in the Digital Era: The Role of Ownership Discrepancy.Muhammad Zulfiqar, Weidong Huo, Shifei Wu, Shihua Chen, Ehsan Elahi & Muhammad Usman Yousaf - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:928447.
    This study examines the R&D investment behaviour of different types of family-controlled firms with the moderating role of ownership discrepancy between cash-flow rights and excess voting rights by using the sufficiency conditions’ theoretical framework of ability and willingness developed by De Massis. It uses data from family firms that have issued A-shares from 2008 to 2018. They used pooled OLS regression for data analysis and Tobit regression for robustness checks. This study classifies family firm types into two (...)
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  34.  55
    Mammonymy, Maternal-Line Names, and Cultural Identification: Clues from the Onomasticon of Hellenistic Uruk.Stephanie M. Langin-Hooper & Laurie E. Pearce - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 134 (2):185.
    The onomasticon of Hellenistic Uruk demonstrates that, in some cases, individuals with Greek names were included in otherwise Babylonian families. Often, such Greek names have been interpreted by scholars as evidence for Hellenization. This article suggests an alternate explanation, based on evidence throughout the family trees for a series of naming practices that focus on the perpetuation of names of female relatives and transmission of preferred family names through maternal lines. Particularly important to this (...)
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  35.  54
    Brighouse and Swift on the family, ethics and social justice.Gideon Calder - 2016 - European Journal of Political Theory 15 (3):363-372.
    The family disrupts equality while also, think many, providing goods of unique value. In Family Values, Brighouse and Swift tackle both of these tendencies, offering a refined and distinctive liberal egalitarian account both of the value of family life, and the limits of what may be done in its name. It builds up from an account of children's specific interests to a defence of ‘familial relationship goods’ as providing the best way of satisfying those interests. Thus though (...)
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  36.  52
    Naming the human animal: Genesis 1–3 and other animals in human becoming.Arthur Walker-Jones - 2017 - Zygon 52 (4):1005-1028.
    Recently the paleoanthropologist Pat Shipman has proposed what she calls the animal connection as the human trait that connects all other traits. Theologians and biblical scholars have proposed many relational, functional, and ontological interpretations of the image of God in humans and human nature, but have generally not included a connection with animals. Genesis 1–3, however, weaves human and animal creation in a variety of ways, and Adam's naming of other species implies they are understood as family or kin. (...)
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  37.  9
    Zur Familie im 7. Jahrhundert im Spannungsfeld von verfassungsgeschichtlicher Konstruktion und kentischen Quellen.Daniela Fruscione - 2014 - In Karl Ubl & Steffen Patzold (eds.), Verwandtschaft, Name Und Soziale Ordnung. De Gruyter. pp. 195-222.
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  38.  38
    The Role of Family factors on the Relapse Behaviour of Male Adolescent Opiate Abusers in Kerman (A province in Iran).Samira Golestan - 2010 - Asian Culture and History 2 (1):P126.
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  39.  12
    Ancestry and family identity in suetonius’ caesars.Phoebe Garrett - 2021 - Classical Quarterly 71 (2):777-790.
    Suetonius’ Lives of the Caesars usually begin with a family tree. These family trees are often rhetorical, foreshadowing in the ancestors character traits that will be themes of the rest of the Life. This particular rhetorical strategy relies upon an older phenomenon of ‘family identity’—namely, the literary application of similar characteristics to people in the same family—such as the one that tells us that the Claudii are proud and the Domitii Ahenobarbi are ferocious. Gary Farney studied (...)
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  40.  10
    Interpersonal communication within the family for improving adolescent religiosity.Christiana W. Sahertian, Betty A. Sahertian & Alfred E. Wajabula - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (4).
    National education is a conscious and planned effort to help children develop their potential be spiritually strong, religious, intelligent, a strong personality and noble character and noble skills. For this reason, education not only focuses on the aspect of children’s knowledge but also on religion and morals aspects. This education begins in the family through communication patterns that are created between parents and children in the form of interpersonal communication that can increase the religiosity of adolescents. Therefore, this article (...)
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  41.  68
    Games and Family Resemblances.Anthony Manser - 1967 - Philosophy 42 (161):210 - 225.
    In his Philosophical Investigations , Wittgenstein introduces the notion of a ‘family resemblance’ to deal with certain problems. Talking of games and what they seem to have in common, he points out that there are no common features in virtue of which we call all games ‘games’. Instead there are, he claims, many different similarities and relationships; he says ‘we see a complicated network of similarities overlapping and criss-crossing: sometimes overall similarities, sometimes similarities of detail’. He then goes on (...)
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  42. The Weight of Tradition in the Formation of the Name Signs of the Deaf in China.Yau Shun-Chiu - 1996 - Diogenes 44 (175):55-65.
    The Chinese are probably the most particular people in the world when it comes to their names. As the Chinese proverb says, “worse than being born under a bad star is to receive a bad name.” For this reason it is difficult, if not impossible, to evaluate the role of name signs in China without a certain knowledge of the Chinese tradition regarding the attribution of names. A legal Chinese name is made up of a family name, (...)
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  43.  17
    The impact of family planning supply factors on unmet need in rural egypt 1988ð1989.Fiona Steele & Fatma El-Zahraa M. M. Geel - 1999 - Journal of Biosocial Science 31 (3):311-326.
    This paper examines the reasons for the high level of unmet needfor contraception in rural Egypt, using data from the individual survey andservice availability module of the 1988Ð89 Egypt Demographic and HealthSurvey. Two broad sets of potential factors are considered: characteristics ofa woman which influence her desire for children and thus her propensity touse contraception, and factors relating to the family planning serviceenvironment in which she lives. The results from a multivariate analysis showthat certain individual characteristics, such as (...) composition andeducation, have a strong impact on the level of contraceptive use and on theproportion of total demand for spacing or limiting childbearing that is metby use of family planning. Unmet need, however, remains fairly constantacross demographic and socioeconomic subgroups of the population. Thelargest variations in unmet need are regional, but elements of the familyplanning services, namely the provision of a community-based nurse whodistributes family planning and female doctors at clinics, also play animportant role. (shrink)
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  44.  19
    It’s a Family Affair: A Case for Consistency in Family Foundation Giving and Family Firm Community CSR Activity.Cristina Cruz, Hana Milanov & Judit Klein - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-17.
    Although most business-owning families (BOFs) that operate large family firms practice community social engagement both in private via family foundations and in the business domain via community corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs, the relationship between their activities in the two domains remains unclear. Prior literature speculates that BOFs will deprioritize firms’ community CSR when they have family foundations as more efficient vehicles to achieve socioemotional wealth (SEW), which would imply that such BOFs are less ethical in operating (...)
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  45.  26
    The DING family of proteins: ubiquitous in eukaryotes, but where are the genes?Anne Berna, Ken Scott, Eric Chabrière & François Bernier - 2009 - Bioessays 31 (5):570-580.
    PstS and DING proteins are members of a superfamily of secreted, high‐affinity phosphate‐binding proteins. Whereas microbial PstS have a well‐defined role in phosphate ABC transporters, the physiological function of DING proteins, named after their DINGGG N termini, still needs to be determined. PstS and DING proteins co‐exist in some Pseudomonas strains, to which they confer a highly adhesive and virulent phenotype. More than 30 DING proteins have now been purified, mostly from eukaryotes. They are often associated with infections or with (...)
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  46.  29
    Poulou's family romance and the book.Anne-Marie Picard - 2001 - Sartre Studies International 7 (2):76-86.
    The Words, as its name suggests, interweaves with the fictionalized account of Sartre's childhood the story of his discovery of reading and writing. To be able to say something about those Words other than what Sartre has said himself, we must have in mind a precise goal, a clear question which we must not lose sight of. Ours is: how does Sartre explain to himself his entry into the world of written signs, into what we will call, with Lacan, the (...)
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  47.  11
    Interpersonal communication within the family for improving adolescent religiosity.Christiana D. W. Sahertian, Betty A. Sahertian & Alfred E. Wajabula - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (4):1-9.
    National education is a conscious and planned effort to help children develop their potential be spiritually strong, religious, intelligent, a strong personality and noble character and noble skills. For this reason, education not only focuses on the aspect of children's knowledge but also on religion and morals aspects. This education begins in the family through communication patterns that are created between parents and children in the form of interpersonal communication that can increase the religiosity of adolescents. Therefore, this article (...)
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  48.  57
    Traité de Tous les Noms (What Is Called Naming).Gil Anidjar - 2006 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 10 (2):287-301.
    What’s in a name after Derrida? What’s in a name after all? What is a name such that it always already remains, after all is said and done? And who or what is itthat one calls name, names, or by name? Is it possible (for anyone or anything) not to have a name of one’s own? Or to have another? The same as another? Is it possible to call and recall, in the name of memory and remembrance, indifference or (...)
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  49.  45
    The Chinese names of the four directions.Laurent Sagart - 2004 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 124 (1):69-76.
    It is shown that the Old Chinese terms for the four directions form two etymological pairs, one of which (north-south) relates to the notions of front and back (of the house: houses faced south in early China ) and the other (east-west) to notions of beginning vs. ceasing movement, applied to the sun. The relevant word families are adumbrated, the morphology explained and Sino-Tibetan cognates established.
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  50.  19
    The Name is the Meaning: Language Used for the So-Called ‘MENA’.Patrizia Rinaldi - forthcoming - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique:1-20.
    Contemporary international migration is directly related to the construction of the nation-state. The variations in this migration are multiple, depending on the type of mobility, the territories and the characteristics of the people who practice it. One kind of migration that has been particularly important at the end of the twentieth century and so far in the twenty-first century is that of minors who migrate without being accompanied by their parents. The legal definitions, bureaucratic practices and rights of these minors-turned-migrants (...)
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