- The RETHINK Study: Could pain catastrophising explain why some women are more likely to attend hospital during the latent phase of labour. more
- The retirement of the UK’s first male professor of midwifery - Paul Lewis more
- The return of the merlin to the south pennines more
- The Revenge of Folk Culture more
- The Revenge of Folk Politics more
- The Rhetoric of Greek Political Advertisement more
- The Rhetoric of Online Regulation—Failing Yet Again to Learn from History”. more
- The rhythm of psychotherapeutic attention: a training model more
- The right kind of scrutiny more
- The Right to Know and the Right Not to Know Revisited more
- The Right to Know and the Right Not to Know Revisited: Part One more
- The right to the city: outdoor informal sport and urban belonging in multicultural spaces more
- The Right to the Truth as an Enabler for Missing Persons Efforts more
- The Right to theTruth as an Enabler for Missing Persons Efforts more
- The Rights Approach to the Right to a Public Hearing more
- The ripple effect of animal disease outbreaks on food systems: The case of African Swine Fever on the Chinese pork market. more
- The rise and fall of BeReal: Values of and motivations for (dis)engagement with authenticity-promoting social media more
- The rise and fall of the ‘nudge’ of minimum unit pricing: The continuity of neoliberalism in alcohol policy in England more
- The rise of a proactive local media strategy in British political communication: clear continuities and evolutionary change 1966-2001 more
- The rise of Bronze Age Society: Travels, transmissions and transformations more
- The risk of believing that emotions are bad and uncontrollable: association with orthorexia nervosa. more
- The Risk of Information Management Without Knowledge Management: A Case Study. more
- The rival doesn’t catch my eyes: In-group relevance modulates inhibitory control over anti-saccades more
- The Road to Quality Enhancement in Tourism more
- The Robot Made Me Do It: Human-Robot Interaction and Risk-Taking Behavior. more