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  1. Craigslist Joe is a 2012 documentary film that follows Joseph Garner for a month of travel across the United States, solely supporting himself by contacting people on the website Craigslist. He spent the month without using any form of currency and without contacting people he already knew, relying on Craigslist users' "kindness and generosity".

    • Joseph Garner
    • Eve Marson Singbiel, Joseph Garner, Angelique Sheppard
    • David G. Garner
    • Joseph Garner
  2. Joseph Garner, D.Phil., Professor, received his doctoral degree from the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford, Great Britain, where he studied the developmental neuroethology of stereotypies in captive animals (1995-1999).

  3. Joseph Garner, D.Phil., Professor, received his doctoral degree from the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford, Great Britain, where he studied the developmental neuroethology of stereotypies in captive animals (1995-1999).

  4. Sep 1, 2014 · Documentary Adventure. In a time when America's economy was crumbling and sense of community was in question, one guy left everything behind to see if he could survive solely on the support and goodwill of the 21st century's new town square: Craigslist. Director. Joseph Garner. Stars. Joseph Garner. Kristos Andrews. Gina Keatley.

    • Joseph Garner
    • 3 min
  5. Molecular psychiatry 20 (9), 1085-1090. , 2015. 249. 2015. Reliability and validity of a modified gait scoring system and its use in assessing tibial dyschondroplasia in broilers. JP Garner, C Falcone, P Wakenell, M Martin, JA Mench. British Poultry Science 43 (3), 355-363. , 2002. 233.

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  7. Joseph Garner, D.Phil., Associate Professor, received his doctoral degree from the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford, Great Britain, where he studied the developmental neuroethology of stereotypies in captive animals (1995-1999).

  8. Joseph Garner, D.Phil., Professor, received his doctoral degree from the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford, Great Britain, where he studied the developmental neuroethology of stereotypies in captive animals (1995-1999).

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