Keyword [Lead] Result: 181 - 200 | Page: 10 of 10 |
181. | Taking the postcolonial lead: Decentering the metropole through Martinican literature |
182. | The goody-good effect: When social comparisons of ethical behavior and performance lead to self-threat versus self-enhancement, social undermining, and ostracism |
183. | Emotional intelligence and the transformational learning journey of 30 senior pastors who participated in LEAD |
184. | The effects of stereotypes on performance attributions: How gender-math stereotypes lead women to internalize failure |
185. | The Character to Lead: A Grounded Theory Ethnography of Character in U.S. Army Combat Leaders |
186. | Affective information processing and anxiety: Attentional bias and short lead interval startle modification |
187. | Faith and Reason in the First Vatican Council's 'Dei Filius' and the Writings of Bernard Lonergan |
188. | An analysis of the impact of empathy on propensity to lead |
189. | The effects of biculturalism, emotional intelligence, and acculturation on motivation to lead of expatriate Latina business leaders and entrepreneurs: An exploratory investigation |
190. | Factitious virtue |
191. | Preaching selected biblical texts to lead Forest Baptist Church, Forest, Mississippi, to be a missional church |
192. | Does globalization lead to convergence? The evolution of organizations' cultural repertoires in the biomedical industry |
193. | The Development of An Ecological Consciousness in Childhood |
194. | The Big, Predictable Picture: Construal-Level Reflects Underlying Life History Strategy |
195. | A study of female commanders in the United States Army: Culture, command and the women who lead |
196. | Israeli warring foreign policy and the writing of identity: The case of Operation Cast Lead |
197. | Essays on development |
198. | Does data-driven learning lead to better academic writing? |
199. | Weak enough to lead: Paul's response to criticism and rivals in 2 Corinthians 10--13. A rhetorical reading |
200. | 'A perfect diamond set in lead': Henry, Prince of Wales and the performance of emergent majesty |
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