Baseline results confirmed the need for family-based youth diabetes prevention interventions in rural AI communities and indicated that enrolling at-risk youth and family members is feasible and acceptable.
This section contains a review by the Italian historian Emilio Gentile of Paul Corner's new book on the Fascist Party and public opinion, and of Christopher Duggan's intimate history of Mussolini's Italy. The review is followed by responses from Corner and Duggan, and the section concludes with comments by Gentile.
seventeenth-century England as an earlier example to Conway's discussion on politeness? Secondly, it is strange that this collection ignores prominent Irish and British families who left for the Continent fearing religious persecution in the 1600s. Many successfully integrated into other European polities' political and military structures in the 1700s. Subsequent generations of expatriate Irish noble families became leading figures in the Spanish and French armies and welcomed newly arrived Catholics from their homeland in the eighteenth century. Nonetheless, this is a thought-provoking work, which will prove invaluable to future generations of researchers who wish to understand British and Irish connections with mainland Europe in the eighteenth century. Paul Corner, The Fascist Party and Popular Opinion in Mussolini's Italy, Oxford University Press: Oxford, 2012; 302 pp.; 9780198730699, £68.00 (hbk) Reviewed by: Christopher Duggan, University of Reading, UK
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