Results 241 to 250 of about 1,969,573 (309)
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British livers and British alcohol policy
The Lancet, 2006Background Rates of mortality due to cirrhosis of the liver are an important indicator of population levels of alcohol harm. Total recorded alcohol consumption in Britain doubled between 1960 and 2002, giving rise to a need to examine and assess cirrhosis mortality trends. Methods Mortality rates were calculated for all ages and for specific age-groups
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2020
“Free Staters have borrowed British soldiers, British guns, British munitions, and British methods. Look round for yourself and see what their denials are worth.”Contents: Leaflet, printed on one side only, from anti-Treaty point of view of Irish Civil War.
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“Free Staters have borrowed British soldiers, British guns, British munitions, and British methods. Look round for yourself and see what their denials are worth.”Contents: Leaflet, printed on one side only, from anti-Treaty point of view of Irish Civil War.
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‘British Schools for British Citizens'?
Oxford Review of Education, 1991Abstract This article explores the contention that the National Curriculum (NC) for 5‐16 year olds in England and Wales provides ‘entitlement’ to all pupils. We interrogate the culturalist impulses in the NC and argue that they are anathema to the development and legitimation of anti‐racist education.
Barry Troyna, Richard Hatcher
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Nation: British Politics, British History and British-ness
2008During the national campaign to elect British members to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, which was fought out in May 1994, the then Conservative Prime Minister, John Major, offered this version of the history of the country whose government he led: This British nation has a monarchy founded by the Kings of Wessex over eleven hundred years ago,
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1984
On 17 October 1945, Attlee, the new Prime Minister, summed up Britain’s obligations in South East Asia as ‘disarming the Japanese forces, releasing Allied prisoners of war and internees and helping to restore normal conditions’,1 that is to restitute British, French and Dutch regimes.
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On 17 October 1945, Attlee, the new Prime Minister, summed up Britain’s obligations in South East Asia as ‘disarming the Japanese forces, releasing Allied prisoners of war and internees and helping to restore normal conditions’,1 that is to restitute British, French and Dutch regimes.
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Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines, 1977
Cecil A. Abrahams, Dilip Hiro
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Cecil A. Abrahams, Dilip Hiro
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Health inequalities among British civil servants: the Whitehall II study.
The Lancet, 1991Gower Street +11 more
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British Labour and British Imperialism
1979It is sometimes maintained that the British working class in the generation before the First World War was largely infected with Jingoism, or Imperialism, and was consequently inclined to abandon what otherwise should have been its natural political attitude — namely, a desire for international tranquillity, coupled with an emphasis on the need for ...
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