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Redefining and Comparative
* " Redefining American Proletarian Literature: Mexican Americans and the Challenge to the Tradition of Radical Dissent " Journal of American & Comparative Cultures, 2001 Spring-Summer ; 24 ( 1-2 ): 59-69.

Redefining and Perspectives
" Economic History and Modern India: Redefining the Link ", Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 16 # 3 August 2002, pp. 109 – 130
Redefining Culture: Perspectives across the disciplines.

Redefining and on
* Center for a New American Dream A non-profit organization working on: Redefining the Dream ; Beyond Consumerism ; Collaborative Communities
* Redefining Prostitution as Sex Work on the International Agenda, by Jo Bindman, Jo Doezema, Anti-Slavery International, Published by Anti-Slavery International, 1997.
LiNK's mission is " Redefining North Korea by focusing on the people, while rescuing and providing resettlement support to North Korean refugees and pursuing an end to the North Korea crisis.
* Redefining Wealth and Progress: New Ways to Measure Economic, Social, and Environmental Change: The Caracas Report on Alternative Development Indicators.

Redefining and Samuel
Sexton has written several books and many articles, including Redefining the Supreme Court's Role: A Theory of Managing the Federal Judicial Process ISBN 0-300-03734-1 ( with Samuel Estreicher ( Yale University Press, 1986 )), and the 141-page A Managerial Theory of the Supreme Court's Responsibilities: An Empirical Study published in the NYU Law Review in October 1984.

Redefining and ),
* Redefining Stalinism ( Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions ), edited by Harold Shukman.
), Breaking the circle of one: Redefining mentorship in the lives and writings of educators.
In her book, Redefining the Subject: Sites of Play in Canadian Women's Writing, Charlotte Sturgess suggests that Brand employs a language — in the short story collection Sans Souci ( 1988 ) and the novel In Another Place, Not Here ( 1996 ), in particular —" through which identity emerges as a mobile, thus discursive, construct.
His book, Redefining Health Care ( written with Elizabeth Teisberg ), develops a new strategic framework for transforming the value delivered by the health care system, with implications for providers, health plans, employers, and government, among other actors.
), Redefining the Discipline of Adult Education.
* Co-author: Al-Jazeera: The Story of the Network that is Rattling Governments and Redefining Modern Journalism ( 2003 ), ISBN 0-8133-4149-3

Redefining and by
* Six Building Designers Who Are Redefining Modern Architecture, an April 2011 radio and Internet report by the Special English service of the Voice of America.
* Human Traffic, Human Rights: Redefining Victim Protection, by Elaine Pearson, Anti-Slavery International.
* Redefining Racism: Fresh Voices from Black America —" Probes the deep chasm between black and white Americans and the increasing hostility towards whites felt by a vast number of African-Americans "
Complexity theory, an offshoot of chaos mathematics theory, explored by Stuart Kauffman in his books " At Home in the Universe " and " Redefining the Sacred " cover the concept of statistical modeling of sociological evolutions.
*" Why Bigger Isn ´ t Better: The Genuine Progress Indicator-1999 Update " by Clifford Cobb, Gary Sue Goodman, and Mathis Wackernagel, Redefining Progress, November 1999
That index was popularized in a 1994 article in The Atlantic Monthly by Clifford Cobb about his new Redefining Progress think tank.
In Redefining the Political Novel, Sharon M. Harris responds to Cathy Davidson's work by arguing that The Coquette can be understood as a political novel ; she writes, “ By recognizing and satirizing, first, the political systems that create women ’ s social realisms and, second, the language used to convey those systems to the broader culture, Foster exposes the sexist bases of the new nation ’ s political ideologies .”
*" Redefining the Corporation: Stakeholder Management and Organizational Wealth ", by Post, Preston, and Sachs, Stanford University Press, 2002
" Hide and Seek: Redefining ' Filipino ' in Cecilia Manguerra Brainard's Fiction by Filipinos in America ( 1993 ) and Contemporary Fiction by Filipinos in America ( 1997 ).

Redefining and Christian
* Webster, Peter and Jones, Ian, ' Expressions of Authenticity: Music for Worship ' In: Redefining Christian Britain.

Redefining and 2006
* Redefining the Prologue ( 2006 )
( 2006 ) " Redefining Health Care: Creating Value-Based Competition On Results ", Harvard Business School Press, 2006.
Rebel-in-Chief: How George W. Bush Is Redefining the Conservative Movement and Transforming America ( 2006 )

Redefining and .
* Redefining the specifications of design solutions which can lead to better guidelines for traditional design activities ( graphic, industrial, architectural, etc.
In her research paper titled " Redefining Fa ' afafine: Western Discourses and the Construction of Transgenderism in Samoa ," Johanna Schmidt has argued that the Western attempts to reinterpret the Samoan third gender identity of Fa ' afafine in terms of homosexuality is influencing the fa ' afafine identity itself which is being reorganised in western ways, i. e. from being a feminine gender space to being a homosexual space.
Redefining Cultural Literacy ( Alexandria, Virginia ) 1994.
* Koltai, L. Redefining The Associate Degree.
He was a host of the PBS program National Desk, including the segment, " Redefining Racism: Fresh Voices From Black America ," for which he won an AEGIS Award of Excellence, a Telly award, and an Emerald City Gold Award of Excellence.
* The annual RISE ( Redefining Investment Strategy Education ) Forum is the largest student investment conference in the world.
Redefining the basic structure was the city in 1983.
* David S. Brown, " Redefining American History: Ethnicity, Progressive Historiography and the Making of Richard Hofstadter ," The History Teacher, Vol.
Redefining Our Relationships: Guidelines For Responsible Open Relationships.

Judaism and Age
Its definition varies according to the tradition and aims of those following it, from its religious origin as an integral part of Judaism, to its later Christian, New Age, or Occultist syncretic adaptions.
The first claims of global supremacy of a specific god date to the Late Bronze Age, with Akhenaten's Great Hymn to the Aten ( speculatively connected to Judaism by Sigmund Freud in his Moses and Monotheism ).
New Age practices and philosophies sometimes draw inspiration from major world religions: Buddhism, Taoism, Chinese folk religion, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam ( especially Sufism ), Judaism ( especially Kabbalah ), Sikhism ; with strong influences from East Asian religions, Gnosticism, Neopaganism, New Thought, Spiritualism, Theosophy, Universalism and Western esotericism.
Originally the main god of the Iron Age kingdoms of Israel and Judah, worship of Yahweh alone ( monotheism ) became entrenched in Judaism in the exilic and Persian periods.
Judaism has gone through three stages between its origins in Iron Age Palestine c. 1000 BCE and the present day.
The story of the Fall of Man from the Garden of Eden in Judaism and Christianity can be seen in a similar light, which would give the basis for theodicies, which attempts to reconcile the existence of evil in the world with the existence of God creating a global explanation of history with the belief in a Messianic Age.
In Judaism the term " end of days " is a reference to the Messianic Age and the Jewish belief in the coming of mashiach and the Olam haba, that will usher in peace and unity for all mankind, in the service of one God.
the phrase umeivi go ' eil (" and brings a redeemer ") is changed in Reform Judaism to umeivi ge ' ulah (" who brings redemption "), replacing the personal messiah with a Messianic Age.
: Jewish Renewal is sometimes referred to as " New Age " by people who do not know that meditation, dance, chant, and mysticism have been present in Judaism throughout the ages and not, as some mistakenly believe, patched on to Judaism from other cultures or made up out of whole cloth.
However, since the mainstream Jewish belief is that the Messiah has not yet come and that the Messianic Age is not yet present, the total rejection of Jesus as either messiah or deity in Judaism has never been a central issue for Judaism.
* Jewish Renewal, an organized spiritualist approach to Judaism, incorporating Kabbalah and New Age principles, with around 50 congregations worldwide.
: At a time when New Age enthusiasm is persuading numbers of people, disenchanted with traditional religious expression, to seek fresh ways of discovering spiritual meaning in their lives, Conservative Judaism has found in an age-old practice a metaphor for rebirth and renewal that retains its power to uplift, cleanse, and inspire.
Other denominations, such as Reform Judaism, perceive a Messianic Age when the world will be at peace, but do not agree that there will be a Messiah as the leader of this era.
Shmuel Eisenstadt argues in the introduction to The Origins and Diversity of Axial Age Civilizations that Max Weber's work in his The Religion of China: Confucianism and Taoism, The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism and Ancient Judaism provided a background for the importance of the period, and notes parallels with Eric Voegelin's Order and History.
Shaddai was a late Bronze Age Amorite city on the banks of the Euphrates river, in northern Syria, as well as the name, or a signifying epithet of a West Semitic deity, whose name was attached by the Hebrews to that of El as one of the names of God in Judaism.
The extent of this community ’ s effect and influence during Middle Age German Judaism has not been studied, they are just books Jews have read.
" Cumbey's accusations include that the New Age movement has " infiltrated all of Christianity, as well as Judaism ", and that it is the motivating force behind ecumenism, holistic health centers, New Thought, humanistic psychology, Montessori schools, modernism, secular humanism, and zero population growth.
Rabbinic Judaism does not separate the original coming of the Messiah and the advent of the Messianic Age.

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