Results 201 to 210 of about 42,855 (255)
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Reasons for relinquishing dogs

Veterinary Record, 2015
ACCORDING to a number of publications, the commonest reason for a dog being brought in by its owner to a rehoming centre relates to concerns about the dog's behaviour (Miller and others 1996, Diesel and others 2010). Over the past year I have been volunteering at the Hull Animal Welfare Trust and, during the course of my first few weeks, I began to ...
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Physician's drug innovation and relinquishment

Social Science & Medicine (1967), 1977
Abstract Attention is given to the processes involved in the selection of drugs for prescribing by general practitioners. Two particular aspects are focussed upon. The first is innovation, whereby a new preparation is used by physicians. It is argued that this is an irrational process under certain systems of drug administration since general ...
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Embryo Relinquishment for Family Building: How Should it be Conceptualised?

, 2011
This article discusses two competing conceptualisations of the relinquishment of unused cryopreserved embryos for family building, as either ‘embryo donation’ or ‘embryo adoption’.
E. Blyth, L. Frith, M. Paul, Roni Berger
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Saving Normal: A new look at behavioral incompatibilities and dog relinquishment to shelters.

Journal of veterinary behavior, 2021
G. Patronek   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Relinquishing the Dream

2008
The 1973 War had not resulted in a decisive Arab military victory. Nevertheless, it helped to restore Arab pride and confidence. Israel’s Defense Minister, Moshe Dayan, wrote that the Arabs were considerably stronger than they had been during previous wars: “As for the fighting standard of the Arab soldiers, I can sum it up in one sentence: they did ...
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Relinquished

GeoHumanities, 2020
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Records of Relinquishment

The Public Historian
This article focuses on the archive of the Washington Female Orphan Asylum, founded in 1815, and places the study of philanthropy in conversation with scholarship on the archive in histories of slavery, colonization, and trauma. It argues, first, that philanthropic and reform institutions such as the asylum were domestic sites of empire and that their ...
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Relinquishing

Adoption & Fostering, 1981
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