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    1. Collections | Duke University Libraries

      War Department and monetary regulation. >3000 items, 4.5 linear feet, dated 1924-1980.

    2. Select Bibliography - Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) - LibGuides at Duke University

      Costa -- Demystifying microcredit : the Grameen Bank, NGOs, and neoliberalism in Bangladesh / Lamia Karim -- Feminist bastards : toward (...)

    3. Economists' Papers - Rubenstein Library Resources on Diplomacy and International Relations - LibGuid

      War Department and monetary regulation. Africa Arthur I. Bloomfield Papers, 1927-1995.

    4. Open Access Day at Duke

      Dir. of the RCSB Protein Data Bank, Senior Advisor to the San Diego Supercomputer Center, Adjunct Professor at the Burnham Institute, (...)

    5. Rubenstein Library - Middle East Primary Sources - LibGuides at Duke University

      These groups include Al-Haq (Law in the Service of Man), Badil, B'Tselem, Hamoked (Center for the Defense of the Individual), Public Committee (...)

    6. The Goodson Blogson

      Miller: The Positive Second Amendment: Rights, Regulation, and the Future of Heller ( watch video introduction ) Allen Buchanan: (...)

    7. Duke Libraries Center for Data and Visualization Sciences - Page 11 of 12 -

      They are also, broadly speaking, politically similar and have had a similar experience with both tobacco use and government (...)

    8. The Devil's Tale - Page 22 of 130 - Dispatches from the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript

      Duke itself is doing its part to participate in the history of tobacco regulation these days, declaring that on July 1, 2020, Duke will (...)

    9. The Devil's Tale - Page 21 of 128 - Dispatches from the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript

      Blackwell Papers consisted almost exclusively of financial ledgers documenting the dramatic failure of the Bank of Durham, which opened (...)

    10. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 32 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      Given that technological barriers will not work, the only alternative is to simply limit expression.  Regulation, Stevens wrote, may (...)

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