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Examples
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Recovery, Reorientation, and Reformation Wales, c. 1415 – 1642 [Oxford: 1987], p. 281
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Chapter six, "Silver, Cowries, and Copper: Economic Reorientation," moves from administration and culture to economy, analyzing how global and Chinese forces reoriented Yunnan's economy.
Between Winds and Clouds: The Making of Yunnan (Second Century BCE to Twentieth Century CE) 2008
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Reorientation: A period of adjusting and redefining your position and role as a result of a change in a familiar structure or pattern.
Brian Harke Ed.D.: Parents: Lost in the College Transition 2010
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Reorientation: A period of adjusting and redefining your position and role as a result of a change in a familiar structure or pattern.
Brian Harke Ed.D.: Parents: Lost in the College Transition 2010
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Reorientation. 17 years is a long go and like it or not, part of your identity is wrapped up in it.
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Reorientation is certainly needed: it wasn't until this year that Bertelsmann parried Amazon's thrust into online bookselling in Europe, via a rival product called BOL -- which Therese Torris, director of European Internet commerce at Forrester Research in Amsterdam, pronounces "late and tepid."
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I called my article, "Prospectus for a Reorientation of Game Theory."
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Reorientation of rehabilitation professional to PHC
SPEECH BY MR MZONDEKI ON THE OCCASION OF THE DEBATE OF THE STATE OF THE NATION ADDRESS 2004
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Reorientation of the Budget, fiscal policies and the public sector towards redistribution and meeting basic needs of the disadvantaged and the poor;
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Reorientation of the public health care system from a hospital based curative focus to a district based primary health care model.
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