60 research outputs found
Making and breaking order via clothing Clothing regulation, cross-dressing, and the ordering mentality in later medieval and early modern England
Following the events which disrupted social stability in fourteenth and fifteenth-century England, individuals from a variety of social contexts demonstrated a particular necessity to see order visibly displayed in society. This thesis examines sumptuary regulations and cross-dressing side by side to demonstrate clothing's relationship to both making and breaking order. In the act of revealing this relationship, this thesis will argue that the two cases demonstrate clothing’s importance in creating a visible confirmation of social order which ultimately brings to the surface an underlying collective ordering mentality that equated a sense of security with arranging everyone in society in their rightful place
Ethanol stimulates expression of functional H+,K+-ATPase in SF9 cells
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21983___.PDF (publisher's version ) (Open Access
Excitation and regeneration in vision: biochemical and biophysical aspects
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mmubn000001_229124445.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Promotor : S. Bonting134 p
Role of sugar residues for recombinant gastric H+,K+-ATPase
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24837___.PDF (publisher's version ) (Open Access
Cholecystokinin-stimulated enzyme secretion from dispersed rabbit pancreatic acinar cells : phosphorylation-dependent changes in potency and efficacy
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21666___.PDF (publisher's version ) (Open Access
Differences in uptake, storage and release properties between inositol trisphosphate-sensitive and -intensitive Ca2+ stores in permeabilized pancreatic acinar cells
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21807___.PDF (publisher's version ) (Open Access
Involvement of glutamic acid 820 in K+ and SCH 28080 binding to gastric H+,K+-ATPase
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The use of primary care services by drug users attending a HIV prevention unit.
Intravenous drug using clients of a Dublin HIV Prevention Unit were interviewed about their use of general practitioner services. Sixty eight percent of clients had visited a GP within the previous year and 48% were registered with a GP under the General Medical Services (GMS) Scheme. Of 161 interviewees 60 were being treated with a fixed dose regimen of methadone at the Prevention Unit; this group was far less likely to visit a GP with a drug related problem and far less likely to have received methadone from a GP. Members of the GMS were much more likely than non members to have visited a GP and also more likely to have attended a specific GP for all problems besides methadone treatment. Methadone treatment and medical cover within the GMS Scheme emerged as important influences on the behaviour of clients with respect to general practitioners
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