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Hits 1 – 12 of 12

1
High-Stakes Testing for Adibashi Students: Colonial Approaches to Education for Indigenous Communities of Bangladesh
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2
Directions in intellectual property law research: a linguistic contribution
Durant, Alan; Davis, Jennifer. - : Oxford University Press, 2020
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3
Toward a paradigm shift from deficit-based to proactive speech and language treatment: Randomized pilot trial of the Babble Boot Camp in infants with classic galactosemia
In: F1000Res (2020)
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4
Learning to work in white spaces: An autoethnographic and linguistic analysis of racial and gender discrimination in a Midwestern American organization
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5
Linguistic analysis in trade mark law: current approaches and new challenges
Davis, Jennifer; Durant, Alan. - : Walter de Gruyter, 2018
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6
HAVE A BREAK and the changing demands of trademark registration
Davis, Jennifer; Durant, Alan. - : Edward Elgar, 2015
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7
Paranoid Thinking, Suspicion, and Risk for Aggression: A Neurodevelopmental Perspective
In: Psychology Faculty Publications (2012)
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8
To protect or not to protect? The eligibility of commercially-used short verbal texts for copyright and trade mark protection
Davis, Jennifer; Durant, Alan. - : Sweet & Maxwell, 2011
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9
How does substantial similarity of expression in infringement actions look from a linguistic point of view?
Durant, Alan. - : Cambridge University Press, 2010
Abstract: This chapter argues that impressions of substantial similarity of expression in literary copyright infringement actions, including in relation to allegations of non-literal copying, can be clarified by investigating features of verbal discourse organisation that give rise to them. Reference to verbal structures might then be made in copyright actions, where helpful, in a manner resembling specialist understanding of musical composition and software design. The value of broadly ‘linguistic’ description, it is proposed, should nevertheless not be overstated, as some kind of definitive expert evidence (which would potentially interfere with and might unduly extend fact-finding efforts already made by the courts). Rather, it is claimed, greater linguistic precision in dealing with perceptions of textual similarity may help in understanding boundaries relied on in judicial opinions between verbal copying, treatment, textual architecture, and ideas, including boundaries based on general concepts such as ‘abstraction’ and ‘generality’.
URL: https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/8160/
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10
Religious experience and symbols of presence amongst the people of Eastern James Bay
Davis, Jennifer Mary. - : McGill University, 2008
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11
How can I tell the trade mark on a piece of gingerbread from all the other marks on it? Naming and meaning in verbal trademark signs
Durant, Alan. - : Cambridge University Press, 2008
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12
Phonotactic probability and past tense use by children with specific language impairment and their typically developing peers
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 21 (2007) 10, 747-758
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OLC Linguistik
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