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    1. Collections | Duke University Libraries

      Many collection materials document Burmeister's research on Capital Theory, Economic Growth Theory and Arbitrage Pricing (...)

    2. Women at the Center - Issue 7, Spring 2005

      . • Anyone who pre- sents a photo ID and completes our regis- tration forms can use our collections. • Many of our collec- tions come (...)

    3. Women at the Center - Issue 29, Spring 2016

      While the cervical cap never became popular among American women, the cap trials nonetheless show that women’s desires for safe, inexpensive, (...)

    4. Women at the Center - Issue 26, Fall 2014

      The basic principles of feminist peda- gogy as outlined in the course led by Maria Accardi (and in her book by the same title) include active (...)

    5. Women at the Center - Issue 10, Fall 2006

      Could you explain your theory of this evolu­ tion of the women's movement?

    6. Women at the Center - Issue 11, Spring 2007

      Jason Demers, Programme in English, York University, Canada, for work on his disserta­ tion on Kathy Acker and French Post­ Structuralist (...)

    7. New Orleans’ Nourishing Networks: Foodways and Municipal Markets in the Nineteenth Century Global So

      Because this reading list focuses on foodways, we are able to place taste at the center of our sensorial study—analyzing descriptions of taste (...)

    8. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/users/kurt.cumiskey/votava_nadellprize_app.pdf

      Highly popular, media has adapted Sayer’s Lord Peter Wimsey into many different forms including television and radio shows. 44. (...)

    9. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/2023-04/U%20Xie_NadellPrize.pdf

      In his works, the notions of forms of life, criteria, skepticism, faith, and language are taken apart and explored 8 from every direction.

    10. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/2022-06/Exhibition%20Language%20EDI%20Guidelines.pdf

      Besides being important in social theory, the concept of class as a collection of individuals sharing similar economic circumstances (...)

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