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Noun

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Mount Everest syndrome

  1. Alternative form of Everest syndrome.
    • 1996, Chuck Musciano, Bill Kennedy, HTML: The Definitive Guide, O’Reilly & Associates, →ISBN, page 189:
      Resist falling prey to the “Mount Everest syndrome” of inserting images simply because you can.
    • 2014, Nancy Morse, chapter 8, in Sacred Places, →ISBN, page 97:
      “People have been interested in Indian land ever since they knew it was there. Sort of like the Mount Everest syndrome, I guess.”
    • 2017, Rafael Biermann, “The Role of International Bureaucracies”, in Rafael Biermann, Joachim A. Koops, editors, The Palgrave Handbook of Inter-Organizational Relations in World Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN, section 3 (Theories and Approaches), page 250:
      The regime turn in IR started with Robert Keohane (1969) accusing UN studies of suffering from a ‘Mount Everest syndrome’. It is not sufficient, he argued, to study the UN because it is there.