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Montezuma's treasure

BMJ, 2005
Has Mexico found malpractice gold in conciliation-arbitration? T ena-Tamayo and Sotelo report in this issue (p 528) on Mexico's conciliation-arbitration system for handling malpractice disputes. Their report reminds us that finding the perfect medical liability system is like panning for gold—it is a global endeavor with a low chance of success ...
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Troubled treasure

Science, 2019
Mined in a conflict zone and sold for profit, fossils in Burmese amber offer an exquisite view of the Cretaceous—and an ethical quandary.
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Treasure

Geology Today, 2004
The word ‘treasure’ conjures an image of objects of silver and gold, perhaps encrusted with gemstones, and some treasures dug from the ground certainly match this image (Fig. 1). However, a theme that ran through the recent exhibition of Treasure at the British Museum was that the archaeological value of treasure does not depend only on its content of ...
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Treasure Lost, Treasure Regained

2009
In the spring of 2001, an announcement from the customs service in Giurgiu caused a stir in the halls of the “Teohari Antonescu” County Museum in Giurgiu: during a routine check carried out on a train coming from Bulgaria, a significant batch of objects of archaeological origin was discovered.
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Treasures: Palestine/Israel, 1979

The problem of beehive theft in settlements in Palestine/Israel from the late nineteenth century is used to consider colonial planning. It asks how settler beekeepers who lost their hives made claims about ownership, rights, and state responsibility; about the ways in which they understood their own victimhood vis-à-vis the perceived thief—consistently
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Margaret's Treasure

Journal of Palliative Medicine, 2001
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