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Books > Science & Mathematics > Biology, life sciences > Human biology & related topics

The Human Brain during the First Trimester 21- to 23-mm Crown-Rump Lengths - Atlas of Human Central Nervous System Development,... The Human Brain during the First Trimester 21- to 23-mm Crown-Rump Lengths - Atlas of Human Central Nervous System Development, Volume 4 (Paperback)
Shirley A. Bayer, Joseph Altman
R1,485 Discovery Miles 14 850 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

1) Classic anatomical atlases 2) Detailed labeling of the earliest phases of prenatal neorological development 3) Appeals to neuroanatomists, developmental biologists and clinical practioners. 4) Persistent relevantce - brain development is not going to change.

Cell Chemistry and Physiology: Part IV, Volume 4D (Hardcover): Edward Bittar Cell Chemistry and Physiology: Part IV, Volume 4D (Hardcover)
Edward Bittar
R2,924 Discovery Miles 29 240 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This volume is intended to complete the Cell Chemistry and physiology module. It is about how the traditional boundaries of cell chemistry and physiology are being erased by molecular biology. We do not think it necessary to elaborate on this theme, particularly since the body of core knowledge found in this volume brings us a stage closer to answering the question, "what makes cell biology into a new discipline?"
The first part of the volume deals with the chemistry of actin and myosin and is followed by chapters on cell motility, ATP synthesis in muscle, and contraction in smooth and skeletal muscle. Here the reader is immediately made aware of the contributions molecular biology is making to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying muscle contraction. It is perhaps enough to point out that Huxley's concept of the cross-bridge cycle and generation of force can now be explained in molecular terms. Topics such as muscle fatigue and muscle disorders, as well as malignant hyperthermia are bound to arouse active learning in the student and set the stage for problem-based learning.
Most medical students look askance at thermobiology. We think this is a mistake; hence, we have included a section dealing with this subject. This brings us to the chapter on the heat shock response, which at the very outset makes clear that many stressors besides heat are known to result in heat shock gene expression. Many of the heat shock proteins occur in unstressed cells and some of them behave as chaperones. These proteins also reach high levels in a wide range of diseases including neurodegenerative disorders. Whether certain diseases are the result of mutations in the heat shock genes is not yet known. As will be appreciated, much of the work done in this field involved the use of cultured cells. Animal cells in culture are the subject of the last chapter.

Kindred - Neanderthal Life, Love, Death and Art (Paperback): Rebecca Wragg Sykes Kindred - Neanderthal Life, Love, Death and Art (Paperback)
Rebecca Wragg Sykes
R588 R474 Discovery Miles 4 740 Save R114 (19%) Ships in 12 - 19 working days
Neanderthal Language - Demystifying the Linguistic Powers of our Extinct Cousins (Hardcover): Rudolf Botha Neanderthal Language - Demystifying the Linguistic Powers of our Extinct Cousins (Hardcover)
Rudolf Botha
R3,106 Discovery Miles 31 060 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Did Neanderthals have language, and if so, what was it like? Scientists agree overall that the behaviour and cognition of Neanderthals resemble that of early modern humans in important ways. However, the existence and nature of Neanderthal language remains a controversial topic. The first in-depth treatment of this intriguing subject, this book comes to the unique conclusion that, collective hunting is a better window on Neanderthal language than other behaviours. It argues that Neanderthal hunters employed linguistic signs akin to those of modern language, but lacked complex grammar. Rudolf Botha unpacks and appraises important inferences drawn by researchers working in relevant branches of archaeology and other prehistorical fields, and uses a large range of multidisciplinary literature to bolster his arguments. An important contribution to this lively field, this book will become a landmark book for students and scholars alike, in essence, illuminating Neanderthals' linguistic powers.

The Online World of Surrogacy (Paperback): Zsuzsa Berend The Online World of Surrogacy (Paperback)
Zsuzsa Berend
R892 Discovery Miles 8 920 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Zsuzsa Berend presents a methodologically innovative ethnography of SurroMomsOnline.com, the largest surrogacy support website in the United States. Surrogates' views emerge from the stories, debates, and discussions that unfold online. The Online World of Surrogacy documents these collective meaning-making practices and explores their practical, emotional, and moral implications. In doing so, the book works through themes of interest across the social sciences, including definitions of parenthood, the symbolic role of money, reproductive loss, altruism, and the moral valuation of relationships.

Masking in Pandemic U.S. - Beliefs and Practices of Containment and Connection (Hardcover): Urmila Mohan Masking in Pandemic U.S. - Beliefs and Practices of Containment and Connection (Hardcover)
Urmila Mohan
R1,554 Discovery Miles 15 540 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This anthropological study explores the beliefs and practices that emerged around masking in the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic. Americans responded to this illness as unique subjects navigating the flux of social and corporeal boundaries, supporting certain beliefs and acting to shape them as compelling realities. Debates over health and safety mandates indicated that responses were fractured with varied subjectivities in play-people lived in different worlds and bodies were central in conflicts over breathing, masking and social distancing. Contrasting approaches to practices marked the limits and possibilities of imaginaries, signaling differences and similarities between groups, and how actions could be passageways between people and possibilities. During a time of uncertainty and loss, the "efficacious intimacy" of bodies and materials embedded beliefs, values, and emotions of care in mask sewing and usage. By exploring these practices, the author reflects on how American subjects became relational selves and sustained response-able communities, helping people protect each other from mutating viruses as well as moving forward in a shifting terrain of intimacy and distance, connection, and containment.

The Making of You - The Incredible Journey from Cell to Human (Hardcover): Katharina Vestre The Making of You - The Incredible Journey from Cell to Human (Hardcover)
Katharina Vestre; Illustrated by Linnea Vestre
R499 R468 Discovery Miles 4 680 Save R31 (6%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The Political Economy of Organ Transplantation - Where Do Organs Come From? (Hardcover): Hagai Boas The Political Economy of Organ Transplantation - Where Do Organs Come From? (Hardcover)
Hagai Boas
R4,477 Discovery Miles 44 770 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This innovative work combines a rigorous academic analysis of the political economy of organ supply for transplantation with autobiographical narratives that illuminate the complex experience of being an organ recipient. Organs for transplantations come from two sources: living or post-mortem organ donations. These sources set different routes of movement from one body to another. Postmortem organ donations are mainly sourced and allocated by state agencies, while living organ donations are the result of informal relations between donor and recipient. Each route traverses different social institutions, determines discrete interaction between donor and recipient, and is charged with moral meanings that can be competing and contrasting. The political economy of organs for transplants is the gamut of these routes and their interconnections, and this book suggests how such a political economy looks like: what are its features and contours, its negotiation of the roles of the state, market and the family in procuring organs for transplantations, and its ultimate moral justifications. Drawing on Boas' personal experiences of waiting, searching and obtaining organs, each autobiographical section of the book sheds light on a different aspect of the discussed political economy of organs - post-mortem donations, parental donation, and organ market - and illustrates the experience of living with the fear of rejection and the intimidation of chronic shortage. A Political Economy of Organ Transplantation is of interest to students and academics with an interest in bioethics, sociology of health and illness, medical anthropology, and science and technology studies.

Feast, Famine or Fighting? - Multiple Pathways to Social Complexity (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2017): Richard J. Chacon, Ruben G.... Feast, Famine or Fighting? - Multiple Pathways to Social Complexity (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2017)
Richard J. Chacon, Ruben G. Mendoza
R3,860 R3,197 Discovery Miles 31 970 Save R663 (17%) Ships in 12 - 19 working days

The advent of social complexity has been a longstanding debate among social scientists. Existing theories and approaches involving the origins of social complexity include environmental circumscription, population growth, technology transfers, prestige-based and interpersonal-group competition, organized conflict, perennial wartime leadership, wealth finance, opportunistic leadership, climatological change, transport and trade monopolies, resource circumscription, surplus and redistribution, ideological imperialism, and the consideration of individual agency. However, recent approaches such as the inclusion of bioarchaeological perspectives, prospection methods, systematically-investigated archaeological sites along with emerging technologies are necessarily transforming our understanding of socio-cultural evolutionary processes. In short, many pre-existing ways of explaining the origins and development of social complexity are being reassessed. Ultimately, the contributors to this edited volume challenge the status quo regarding how and why social complexity arose by providing revolutionary new understandings of social inequality and socio-political evolution.

Indigenous Health and Well-Being in the COVID-19 Pandemic (Hardcover): Nicholas D. Spence, Fatih Sekercioglu Indigenous Health and Well-Being in the COVID-19 Pandemic (Hardcover)
Nicholas D. Spence, Fatih Sekercioglu
R4,335 Discovery Miles 43 350 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This book investigates the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health and well-being of Indigenous Peoples and assesses the policy responses taken by governments and Indigenous communities across the world. Bringing together innovative research and policy insights from a range of disciplines, this book investigates the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health and well-being of Indigenous Peoples across the world, with coverage of North America, Central America, Africa, and Oceania. Further, it explores the actions taken by governments and Indigenous communities in addressing the challenges posed by this public health crisis. The book emphasises the social determinants of health and well-being, reflecting on issues such as self-governance, human rights law, housing, socioeconomic conditions, access to health care, culture, environmental deprivation, and resource extraction. Chapters also highlight the resilience and agency of Indigenous Peoples in combating the COVID-19 pandemic, despite the legacy of colonialism, patterns of systemic discrimination, and social exclusion. Providing concrete pathways for improving the conditions of Indigenous Peoples in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, this book is essential reading for researchers across indigenous studies, public health, and social policy.

Okinawan Diaspora (Hardcover): Ronald Nakasone Okinawan Diaspora (Hardcover)
Ronald Nakasone
R2,120 Discovery Miles 21 200 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The first Okinawan immigrants arrived in Honolulu in January 1900 to work as contract laborers on Hawai'i's sugar plantations. Over time Okinawans would continue migrating east to the continental U.S., Canada, Brazil, Peru, Argentina, Bolivia, Mexico, Cuba, Paraguay, New Caledonia, and the islands of Micronesia. The essays in this volume commemorate these diasporic experiences within the geopolitical context of East Asia. Using primary sources and oral history, individual contributors examine how Okinawan identity was constructed in the various countries to which. Okinawans migrated, and how their experiences were shaped by the Japanese nation-building project and by globalization. Essays explore the return to Okinawan sovereignty, or what Nobel Laureate Oe Kenzaburo called an "impossible possibility," and the role of the Okinawan labor diaspora in Japan's imperial expansion into the Philippines and Micronesia.

Care across Distance - Ethnographic Explorations of Aging and Migration (Hardcover): Azra Hromadzic, Monika Palmberger Care across Distance - Ethnographic Explorations of Aging and Migration (Hardcover)
Azra Hromadzic, Monika Palmberger
R3,011 Discovery Miles 30 110 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

World-wide migration has an unsettling effect on social structures, especially on aging populations and eldercare. This volume investigates how taken-for-granted roles are challenged, intergenerational relationships transformed, economic ties recalibrated, technological innovations utilized, and spiritual relations pursued and desired, and asks what it means to care at a distance and to age abroad. What it does show is that trans-nationalization of care produces unprecedented convergences of people, objects and spaces that challenge our assumptions about the who, how, and where of care.

Actively Dying - The Creation of Muslim Identities through End-of-Life Care in the United States (Paperback): Cortney Hughes... Actively Dying - The Creation of Muslim Identities through End-of-Life Care in the United States (Paperback)
Cortney Hughes Rinker
R1,394 Discovery Miles 13 940 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This book explores the experiences of Muslims in the United States as they interact with the health care system during serious illness and end-of-life care. It shifts "actively dying" from a medical phrase used to describe patients who are expected to pass away soon or who exhibit signs of impending death, to a theoretical framework to analyze how end-of-life care, particularly within a hospital, shapes the ways that patients, families, and providers understand Islam and think of themselves as Muslim. Using the dying body as the main object of analysis, the volume shows that religious identities of Muslim patients, loved ones, and caregivers are not only created when living, but also through the physical process of dying and through death. Based on ethnographic and qualitative research carried out mainly in the Washington, D.C. region, this volume will be of interest to scholars in anthropology, sociology, public health, gerontology, and religious studies.

Systems of Classification in Premodern Medical Cultures - Sickness, Health, and Local Epistemologies (Paperback): Ulrike... Systems of Classification in Premodern Medical Cultures - Sickness, Health, and Local Epistemologies (Paperback)
Ulrike Steinert
R1,410 Discovery Miles 14 100 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Offers the most up to date research on the subject

Current Methods in Muscle Physiology - Advantages, Problems and Limitations (Hardcover): Haruo Sugi Current Methods in Muscle Physiology - Advantages, Problems and Limitations (Hardcover)
Haruo Sugi
R6,414 R5,975 Discovery Miles 59 750 Save R439 (7%) Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Despite extensive physiological, biochemical, and structural studies, the mechanisms of muscle contraction operating in living muscle fibres are still not clearly understood. This book aims to describe and assess various experimental methods currently used in the field of muscle research. For
each method discussed, there is a comprehensive description of its advantages, problems, and limitations. Each chapter also contains a summary of the central results to have been obtained using each method. Comprehensively written by experts in their respective fields, this book will be of interest
to all investigators in muscle physiology.

Migration and Health - Critical Perspectives (Hardcover): Heide Castaneda Migration and Health - Critical Perspectives (Hardcover)
Heide Castaneda
R4,022 Discovery Miles 40 220 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Migration and Health: Critical Perspectives offers a radical rethinking of the field by unsettling conventional ideas of mobility and borders to highlight the ways in which they produce health inequalities. Covering a wide range of topics, the text provides insight through a critical lens, and proposes areas for intervention along with an added emphasis on the need for future research to address the health inequities that affect migrants. It illustrates how a critical perspective can deepen our understanding of the relationship between migration and health, which remains a defining global issue of our century. The text employs a critical approach to examine the structural conditions of inequality and larger historical and political processes, recognizing that exclusionary bordering practices increasingly occur away from physical points of entry. It posits the concept of migration as complex, tangled and multi-directional and underscores how migrant vulnerability can shape the lives of people in wider communities. Furthermore, it acknowledges diverse and intersectional standpoints, as well as shifting spatial and temporal influences. Chapters include coverage of health in transit; healthcare access and utilization; clinical encounters; communicable disease; labor and occupational health; gender and sexuality; immigration enforcement, detention, deportation; and the effects of forced displacement on refugee and asylum-seeker health. The text is useful for students and scholars of migration or health disparities seeking to understand how the two issues can be approached in a more holistic and critical way. It is further aimed at practitioners and policymakers who are interested in gaining familiarity with the structural conditions of inequality along with the larger historical and political processes that influence contemporary migration patterns.

The Human Brain during the First Trimester 3.5- to 4.5-mm Crown-Rump Lengths - Atlas of Human Central Nervous System... The Human Brain during the First Trimester 3.5- to 4.5-mm Crown-Rump Lengths - Atlas of Human Central Nervous System Development, Volume 1 (Paperback)
Shirley A. Bayer, Joseph Altman
R1,542 Discovery Miles 15 420 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

1) Classic anatomical atlases 2) Detailed labelling of the earliest phases of prenatal neurological development without abbreviations 3) Appeals to neuroanatomists, developmental biologists and clinical practioners 4) Persistent relevance - brain development is not going to change, but this Atlas offers updated terminology for primordial neural structures.

The Human Brain during the First Trimester 15- to 18-mm Crown-Rump Lengths - Atlas of Human Central Nervous System Development,... The Human Brain during the First Trimester 15- to 18-mm Crown-Rump Lengths - Atlas of Human Central Nervous System Development, Volume 3 (Paperback)
Shirley A. Bayer, Joseph Altman
R1,558 Discovery Miles 15 580 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This third of 15 short atlases reimagines the classic 5-volume Atlas of Human Central Nervous System Development. This volume presents serial sections from specimens between 15 mm and 18 mm with detailed annotations, together with 3D reconstructions. An introduction summarizes human CNS development by using high-resolution photos of methacrylate-embedded rat embryos at a similar stage of development as the human specimens in this volume. The accompanying Glossary gives definitions for all the terms used in this volume and all the others in the Atlas. Features Classic anatomical atlas Detailed labeling of structures in the developing brain offers updated terminology and the identification of unique developmental features, such as germinal matrices of specific neuronal populations and migratory streams of young neurons Appeals to neuroanatomists, developmental biologists, and clinical practitioners A valuable reference work on brain development that will be relevant for decades

The Ethics of Kinship - Ethnographic Inquiries (Paperback): James Faubion The Ethics of Kinship - Ethnographic Inquiries (Paperback)
James Faubion; Contributions by Carolyn Babula, Jamila Bargach, John Borneman, Stanford Carpenter, …
R1,402 Discovery Miles 14 020 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

What need is there for kinship? What good is it anyway? The questions are as old as anthropology itself, but few answers have been enduringly persuasive. Kinship systems can contribute to our enslavement, but more often they permit, channel, and facilitate our relations with others and our further fashioning of ourselves--as kin but also as subjects of other kinds. When they do, they are among the matrices of our lives as ethical beings. Each contributor to this innovative book treats his or her own alterity as the touchstone of the exploration of an ethnographically and historically specific ethics of kinship. Together, the chapters reveal the irreducible complexity of the entanglement of the subject of kinship with the subject of nation, class, ethnicity, gender, desire. The chapters speak eloquently to the sometimes liberating stories that we cannot help but keep telling about our kin and ourselves.

Critical Multiculturalism - Uncommon Voices in a Common Struggle (Hardcover): Barry Kanpol, Peter McLaren Critical Multiculturalism - Uncommon Voices in a Common Struggle (Hardcover)
Barry Kanpol, Peter McLaren
R2,790 Discovery Miles 27 900 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This collection explores the way in which critical theory and practice can unite into a common vision of democratic hope. While each author has his or her own specialty, the thread of shared dreams is portrayed in a call for solidarity. The separate viewpoints are drawn together to constitute a democratic platform for an enlightened critical education agenda. From narrative to critical ethnography, case studies explore the multicultural and power struggles of states, districts, and schools. Intimately connected to all contributions in this collection is the commitment of each author to similarly share a common pregnancy of intention within a language of possibility.

Hunting the Gatherers - Ethnographic Collectors, Agents, and Agency in Melanesia 1870s-1930s (Paperback, New edition): Michael... Hunting the Gatherers - Ethnographic Collectors, Agents, and Agency in Melanesia 1870s-1930s (Paperback, New edition)
Michael O'Hanlon, Robert L Welsch
R887 Discovery Miles 8 870 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

." . . a most welcome book . . . Reading this book should irrevocably change how one looks at an ethnographic exhibit . . . These wide-ranging articles . . . augment our understanding of museums and their objects . . . Overall, this is a rich collection of essays, brimming with data and, for the most part, cogently analysed." . JRAI Between the 1870s and the 1930s competing European powers carved out and consolidated colonies in Melanesia, the most culturally diverse region of the world. As part of this process, great assemblages of ethnographic artefacts were made by a range of collectors whose diversity is captured in this volume. The contributors to this tightly-integrated volume take these collectors, and the collecting institutions, as the departure point for accounts that look back at the artefact-producing societies and their interaction with the collectors, but also forward to the fate of the collections in metropolitan museums, as the artefacts have been variously exhibited, neglected, re-conceived as indigenous heritage, or repatriated. In doing this, the contributors raise issues of current interest in anthropology, Pacific history, art history, museology, and material culture. Michael O'Hanlon is Director of the Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford. Robert L. Welsch teaches at the Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth, New Hampshire."

Mental Health and Social Withdrawal in Contemporary Japan - Beyond the Hikikomori Spectrum (Paperback): Nicolas Tajan Mental Health and Social Withdrawal in Contemporary Japan - Beyond the Hikikomori Spectrum (Paperback)
Nicolas Tajan
R1,380 Discovery Miles 13 800 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This book examines the phenomenon of social withdrawal in Japan, which ranges from school non-attendance to extreme forms of isolation and confinement, known as hikikomori. Based on extensive original research including interview research with a range of practitioners involved in dealing with the phenomenon, the book outlines how hikikomori expresses itself, how it is treated and dealt with and how it has been perceived and regarded in Japan over time. The author, a clinical psychologist with extensive experience of practice, argues that the phenomenon although socially unacceptable is not homogenous, and can be viewed not as a mental disorder, but as an idiom of distress, a passive and effective way of resisting the many great pressures of Japanese schooling and of Japanese society more widely. The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781351260800, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CCBY-NC-ND) licence.

The Bonobo and the Atheist - In Search of Humanism Among the Primates (Paperback): Frans De Waal The Bonobo and the Atheist - In Search of Humanism Among the Primates (Paperback)
Frans De Waal
R444 R415 Discovery Miles 4 150 Save R29 (7%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

For many years, de Waal has observed chimpanzees soothe distressed neighbors and bonobos share their food. Now he delivers fascinating fresh evidence for the seeds of ethical behavior in primate societies that further cements the case for the biological origins of human fairness. Interweaving vivid tales from the animal kingdom with thoughtful philosophical analysis, de Waal seeks a bottom-up explanation of morality that emphasizes our connection with animals. In doing so, de Waal explores for the first time the implications of his work for our understanding of modern religion. Whatever the role of religious moral imperatives, he sees it as a Johnny-come-lately role that emerged only as an addition to our natural instincts for cooperation and empathy.

But unlike the dogmatic neo-atheist of his book s title, de Waal does not scorn religion per se. Instead, he draws on the long tradition of humanism exemplified by the painter Hieronymus Bosch and asks reflective readers to consider these issues from a positive perspective: What role, if any, does religion play for a well-functioning society today? And where can believers and nonbelievers alike find the inspiration to lead a good life?

Rich with cultural references and anecdotes of primate behavior, The Bonobo and the Atheist engagingly builds a unique argument grounded in evolutionary biology and moral philosophy. Ever a pioneering thinker, de Waal delivers a heartening and inclusive new perspective on human nature and our struggle to find purpose in our lives."

Oxidative Eustress in Exercise Physiology (Hardcover): James N. Cobley, Gareth W. Davison Oxidative Eustress in Exercise Physiology (Hardcover)
James N. Cobley, Gareth W. Davison
R3,581 Discovery Miles 35 810 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Describes essential redox biology reactions and concepts in exercise physiology. Defines and critiques how to assess and manipulate key redox parameters in an in vivo human exercise context. Summarizes underlying mechanisms. Provides examples of translationally important research relating to many disease states. Includes an international team of leading experts

The Deepest Well - Healing the Long-Term Effects of Childhood Trauma and Adversity (Paperback): Nadine Burke Harris The Deepest Well - Healing the Long-Term Effects of Childhood Trauma and Adversity (Paperback)
Nadine Burke Harris
R460 R398 Discovery Miles 3 980 Save R62 (13%) Ships in 18 - 22 working days

"An extraordinary, eye-opening book." --People National Health Information Awards winner "A rousing wake-up call. . . . This highly engaging, provocative book prove[s] beyond a reasonable doubt that millions of lives depend on us finally coming to terms with the long-term consequences of childhood adversity and toxic stress." --Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow Dr. Nadine Burke Harris was already known as a crusading physician delivering targeted care to vulnerable children. But it was Diego--a boy who had stopped growing after a sexual assault--who galvanized her journey to uncover the connections between toxic stress and lifelong illnesses. The stunning news of Burke Harris's research is just how deeply our bodies can be imprinted by ACEs--adverse childhood experiences like abuse, neglect, parental addiction, mental illness, and divorce. Childhood adversity changes our biological systems, and lasts a lifetime. For anyone who has faced a difficult childhood, or who cares about the millions of children who do, the fascinating scientific insight and innovative, acclaimed health interventions in The Deepest Well represent vitally important hope for preventing lifelong illness for those we love and for generations to come?. "Nadine Burke Harris . . . offers a new set of tools, based in science, that can help each of us heal ourselves, our children, and our world."--Paul Tough, author of How Children Succeed "A powerful--even indispensable--frame to both understand and respond more effectively to our most serious social ills."--New York Times

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