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Redefining and was
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.
That index was popularized in a 1994 article in The Atlantic Monthly by Clifford Cobb about his new Redefining Progress think tank.
Redefining the wheel is the practice of coming up with new and often abstruse ways of describing things when the existing way of describing them was perfectly adequate.

Redefining and 1983
Redefining Security ,” International Security 8, No. 1 ( Summer 1983 ): 129-153.

Redefining and .
* Redefining the specifications of design solutions which can lead to better guidelines for traditional design activities ( graphic, industrial, architectural, etc.
* Redefining Stalinism ( Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions ), edited by Harold Shukman.
" Economic History and Modern India: Redefining the Link ", Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 16 # 3 August 2002, pp. 109 – 130
* Redefining Judaism in an Age of Emancipation: Comparative Perspectives on Samuel Holdheim ( 1806-1860 ), edited by Christian Wiese, Leiden, Brill, 2006.
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.
), 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.
* 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.
* Webster, Peter and Jones, Ian, ' Expressions of Authenticity: Music for Worship ' In: Redefining Christian Britain.
* Redefining Prostitution as Sex Work on the International Agenda, by Jo Bindman, Jo Doezema, Anti-Slavery International, Published by Anti-Slavery International, 1997.
* Human Traffic, Human Rights: Redefining Victim Protection, by Elaine Pearson, Anti-Slavery International.
* The annual RISE ( Redefining Investment Strategy Education ) Forum is the largest student investment conference in the world.
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.
* 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.
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.
( 2006 ) " Redefining Health Care: Creating Value-Based Competition On Results ", Harvard Business School Press, 2006.

basic and structure
The 1954 Amendments completely changed the financing of the vocational rehabilitation program, providing for a three-part grant structure -- for ( 1 ) basic support ; ;
The first part of the new structure -- that for supporting the basic program of vocational rehabilitation services -- is described in this Section.
What Parker and his contemporaries -- Gillespie, Davis, Monk, Roach ( Tristano is an anomaly ), etc. -- did was to absorb the musical ornamentation of the older jazz into the basic structure, of which it then became an integral part, and with which it then developed.
The basic morphological structure of the human breast — female and male — is determined during the prenatal development stage.
Important features of natural language syntax such as agreement and reference are not part of the context-free grammar, but the basic recursive structure of sentences, the way in which clauses nest inside other clauses, and the way in which lists of adjectives and adverbs are swallowed by nouns and verbs, is described exactly.
The Catholic Church views that Christ himself established the sacrament of marriage at the wedding feast of Cana ; therefore, since it is a divine institution, neither the Church nor state can alter the basic meaning and structure of marriage.
which has been significant in establishing the basic structure most ecclesias follow today.
Internal microcode execution in CISC processors, on the other hand, could be more or less pipelined depending on the particular design, and therefore more or less akin to the basic structure of RISC processors.
* The basic structure of Hyperion is taken from the Middle-English cycle of stories The Canterbury Tales.
The basic structure of matter involves charged particles bound together in many different ways.
* An object-oriented program structure in which a class serves as the basic unit of decomposition.
The session version makes clear that the basic structure of the song, including its signature bass-line, percussion arrangement and idiosyncratic introductory and middle eight sections, were already intact prior to any involvement from ZTT or eventual producer Trevor Horn.
Perhaps in more basic terms, the habitus could be understood as a structure of the mind characterized by a set of acquired schemata, sensibilities, dispositions and taste.
Within this basic structure, the author traces the way the Persians developed a custom of conquest and shows how their habits of thinking about the world finally brought about their downfall in Greece.
" The basic format and structure of the box score has changed little since the earliest of ones designed by Chadwick.
This revision was more radical than the Seventh but left unchanged the basic structure of the Classification and the general philosophy of classifying diseases, whenever possible, according to their etiology rather than a particular manifestation.
The final proposals presented to and accepted by the Conference retained the basic structure of the ICD, although with much additional detail at the level of the four digit subcategories, and some optional five digit subdivisions.
After declaring independence from the Soviet political structure completely dominated by Moscow and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union ( CPSU ) until 1991, Kazakhstan retained the basic governmental structure and, in fact, most of the same leadership that had occupied the top levels of power in 1990.
Some proponents of this view of language have advocated a formal approach which studies language structure by identifying its basic elements and then formulating a formal account of the rules according to which the elements combine to form words and sentences.
The dwellings were made of a combination of tree trunks for the basic structure, mud-clad wickerwork walls, and roofs of thatched reeds or straw.
Although Chomsky's theory of a generative grammar has been popular with some linguists since the 1950s, many criticisms of the basic assumptions of generative theory have been put forth by cognitive-functional linguistics, who argue that language structure is created through language use.
The T < sub > 6 </ sub > O < sub > 18 </ sub > is the basic ring structure, where T is usually Si < sup > 4 +</ sup >, but substitutable by Al < sub > 3 +</ sub > or B < sup > 3 +</ sup >.
The basic geographical structure is respected but the tube lines ( and the River Thames ) are smoothed to clarify the relationships between stations.
In poetry, metre ( meter in American English ) is the basic rhythmic structure of a verse or lines in verse.

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