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    <dc:date>2026-04-22T21:44:48Z</dc:date>
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    <title>A Review of the Literature on Case Study Research</title>
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    <description>Title: A Review of the Literature on Case Study Research
Authors: Patricia Anne Brown</description>
    <dc:date>2020-05-15T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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    <title>LaTeX in 24 Hours</title>
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    <description>Title: LaTeX in 24 Hours
Authors: Dilip, Datta
Description: The book, LATEX in 24 Hours: A Practical Guide for Scientific Writing,&#xD;
explains the basic LATEX2ε required for writing scientific documents. Applications&#xD;
of most of the discussed LATEX syntax are presented in such a way that a reader would be able to use them directly without any confusion, however maybe with some minor modifications as per requirement. In many cases, multiple procedures are presented for producing a single item. The main part of the book is stretched over 276 pages dividing into 24 chapters, named as Hours. Hour 1 introduces LATEX, including how a LATEX document is prepared and compiled. Various LATEX vii syntax required for fonts selection, texts and page formatting, items listing, table&#xD;
preparation, figure insertion and drawing, equation writing, user-defined macros, bibliography preparation, list of contents and index generation, and some other miscellaneous issues are discussed in Hours 2–18. Hours 19 and 20 explain the preparation of complete documents, such as letter, article, book, and report. Since a work often needs to be presented to an audience, slide preparation is also explained&#xD;
in Hours 21 and 22. Being an unavoidable fact, error and warning messages generated in different cases are discussed in Hour 23. Finally, some exercises are included for learners in Hour 24.</description>
    <dc:date>2017-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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    <title>LGBT-Parent Families</title>
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    <description>Title: LGBT-Parent Families
Editors: Abbie, E. Goldberg; Katherine, R. Allen
Description: The appearance of a handbook on LGBT-parent families similarly signals&#xD;
and advances the mainstreaming of a category of family that just a short time&#xD;
ago was utterly marginal, subversive, even illegal. As with same-sex marriage, what were once considered to be unacceptably queer forms of family&#xD;
have been moving rapidly from the realm of the clinically abnormal to that of&#xD;
the socially normative. Academic research has been intimately intertwined&#xD;
with the unexpectedly rapid normalization of at least lesbian- and gay-parent&#xD;
families.</description>
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    <title>Research Methods for the Digital Humanities</title>
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    <description>Title: Research Methods for the Digital Humanities
Authors: lewis, levenberg; Tai Neilson; David Rheams
Description: This book introduces a range of digital research methods, locates each&#xD;
method within critical humanities approaches, presents examples from&#xD;
established and emerging practitioners, and provides guides for researchers. In each chapter, authors describe their pioneering work with an&#xD;
emphasis on the types of questions, methods, and projects open to&#xD;
digital humanists. Some methods, such as the translation of literary&#xD;
sources into digital games, are “native” to Digital Humanities and digital technologies. others, such as digital ethnographies, are adopted&#xD;
and adapted from extensive traditions of humanities and social science&#xD;
research. All of the featured methods suggest future avenues for Digital&#xD;
Humanities research.</description>
    <dc:date>2018-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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