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Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies
Scratching the Surface: Adventures in Storytelling is a deeply
personal and intimate memoir told through the lens of Harvey
Ovshinsky's lifetime of adventures as an urban enthusiast. He was
only seventeen when he started The Fifth Estate, one of the
country's oldest underground newspapers. Five years later, he
became one of the country's youngest news directors in commercial
radio at WABX-FM, Detroit's notorious progressive rock station.
Both jobs placed Ovshinsky directly in the bullseye of the nation's
tumultuous counterculture of the 1960s and 70s. When he became a
documentary director, Ovshinsky's dispatches from his hometown were
awarded broadcasting's highest honors, including a national Emmy, a
Peabody, and the American Film Institute's Robert M. Bennett Award
for Excellence. But this memoir is more than a boastful trip down
memory lane. It also doubles as a survival guide and an instruction
manual that speaks not only to the nature of and need for
storytelling but also and equally important, the pivotal role the
twin powers of endurance and resilience play in the creative
process. You don't have to be a writer, an artist, or even
especially creative to take the plunge, Ovshinsky reminds his
readers. ""You just have to feel strongly about something or have
something you need to get off your chest. And then find the courage
to scratch your own surface and share your good stuff with
others."" Above all, Ovshinsky is an educator, known for his
passionate support of and commitment to mentoring the next
generation of urban storytellers. When he wasn't teaching
screenwriting and documentary production in his popular workshops
and support groups, he taught undergraduate and graduate students
at Detroit's College for Creative Studies, Wayne State University,
Madonna University, and Washtenaw Community College. ""The thing
about Harvey,"" a colleague recalls in Scratching the Surface, ""is
that he treats his students like professionals and not like newbies
at all. His approach is to, in a very supportive and
non-threatening way, combine both introductory and advanced
storytelling in one fell swoop.
Nature-based tourism (NBT) is a sector where entrepreneurial
success is highly knowledge-driven. This insightful book offers a
comprehensive evaluation of NBT in a Nordic context, highlighting
how long-established Nordic traditions of outdoor recreation
practices can reveal lessons for the field more broadly. Featuring
contributions from expert scholars, Nordic Perspectives on
Nature-Based Tourism examines the links between place-based
resources and value-added experiences. It considers the way in
which NBT calls for an integrated approach to manage resources for
both outdoor recreation and the development of commercial
experience products. Chapters explore Nordic and international
perspectives, local communities, market dynamics, firms,
creativity, innovations and value-added experience products.
Undergraduate and graduate students and scholars in tourism and
related fields such as geography, planning, hospitality, outdoor
recreation and natural resource management will find the knowledge
and understanding gained from the book invaluable. It will also
prove useful for policymakers, entrepreneurs and volunteers.
First published as "Tracks: The Cv" work directory in 1997, the
tenth revised and updated edition is published in 2006. It gives
information of over 130 professions in the UK, organised in eight
booklets, from communications media to service industries. Titles
include pathways in the arts, construction industry, financial
services, health care, insurance, land and sea work, law, leisure
and tourism, local government, manufacturing crafts, marketing,
planning and public services. Qualifications are listed from GCSE
and NVQ/BTEC to degree level. There are work descriptions and pay
scales with interviews and advice from British chartered institutes
and individuals established in the particular field. Designed in an
easy to access format of a page per profession, the handbooks also
include contacts for working in countries in the European Union,
and a detailed index of internet recruitment sites for each sector.
"Tracks 8" provides information about national and personal
services which range from the armed forces to fire fighter,
hairdressing and call centre work. The wide scope indicates the
varied opportunities for individual development.
Bringing together a series of new perspectives and reflections on
creative economies, this insightful Modern Guide expands and
challenges current knowledge in the field. Interdisciplinary in
scope, it features a broad range of contributions from both leading
and emerging scholars, which provide innovative, critical research
into a wide range of disciplines, including arts and cultural
management, cultural policy, cultural sociology, economics,
entrepreneurship, management and business studies, geography,
humanities, and media studies. Designed to push the boundaries of
understanding on the topic, this Modern Guide initially addresses
definitional and methodological challenges, before offering new
perspectives on the theory and practice of creative and cultural
entrepreneurship, and exploring the role of networks and the
importance of place and mobility. The book concludes by
re-imagining creative economies, raising issues of inequality and
justice, care and solidarity, and opportunities for value
recognition, while providing new visions of inclusivity, cultural
capability, and future development. A timely reflection on the
importance of creative economies, this Modern Guide will be a
critical read for students, scholars and policymakers working to
support and develop future inclusive and sustainable creative
economies.
This Handbook brings together experts from around the world to
reflect critically on the relationship between tourism and rural
community development. It first orients the reader in the important
conceptual and epistemological foundations of the topic, before
moving to consider key concepts and the most significant and
salient theoretical and methodological developments in the field.
Chapters written by a range of well-established, leading and
emerging scholars in the field consider crucial issues facing
tourism development in rural communities across different
geographical settings. The Handbook represents a variety of
traditional and emerging forms of scholarly writing, including
theoretically driven chapters, empirical case studies and
first-person narratives, to offer a detailed study of the topic.
With a forward-looking angle, it studies tourism development in
rural areas, including working with rural communities, tourism
governance and ethical considerations. Chapters also consider new
directions in the field, examining food and tourism, degrowth,
landscapes, animals, social impacts and women social entrepreneurs.
This comprehensive and innovative Handbook offers a wealth of
empirical and theoretical knowledge on tourism and rural community
development, and as such will be a critical resource for tourism,
development studies and human geography scholars and students.
This comprehensive Research Handbook provides international
perspectives on the role of information systems in environmental
sustainability, drawing on groundbreaking research from leading
scholars to predict future trends. This Research Handbook presents
in-depth studies on green information systems which utilise a
diverse range of approaches and methods, including reviews of
previous literature, experimental studies, surveys, and interviews.
Chapters focus on the development and promotion of energy
informatics, the use of digital technologies in the implementation
of a circular economy, and the role of information systems in
supporting the integration of renewable energy. This Research
Handbook further analyses the ways in which digital nudging, demand
response, and the impact of psychological ownership can influence
consumer behaviour and encourage sustainable consumption. Tackling
the issues facing information systems and the environment on an
individual, organisational, and societal scale, this Research
Handbook will be crucial reading for students and scholars in
business ethics, environmental management, information systems, and
management and sustainability. It will also be beneficial for
practitioners in business management and corporate social
responsibility who are interested in environmental sustainability.
This book examines patent law and policy in biotechnology across
the full lifecycle of the patent, focusing on the patent bargain
and the public interest. It considers the central issues of how to
strike an effective balance of rights, and whether public interest
is adequately safeguarded - two issues that are particularly
important in areas of rapidly emerging technology. Expert
contributors are brought together to explore patent eligibility in
biotechnology, focusing on the fields of precision medicine,
biofabrication and non-invasive prenatal testing. Chapters also
explore the construction and coherence of exceptions to
patentability,an examination of FRAND licensing in the context of
the internet of medical things, and the possibility of using
licensing to encourage or ensure the ethical use of patented
technologies. With its carefully constructed analysis, this book
will be an excellent resource for academic researchers, and
students, in the fields of biotechnology law, pharmaceutical law
and intellectual property law. It will also be useful for legal
practitioners and policymakers, as well as charitable bodies and
non-governmental organisations.
Media Institutions and Audiences completes Nick Lacey's trilogy of self-standing texts that give an in-depth introduction to the key concepts of Media Studies at an advanced and university level. The book delivers a range of theories and contemporary case studies in its coverage of media business and the influence of regulation and censorship. The issues surrounding the growing commodification of media texts, and the increasing influence of marketing and public relations, are considered. The major approaches to understanding audiences are also investigated.
George Pell is the most recognisable face of the Australian
Catholic Church. He was the Ballarat boy with the film-star looks
who studied at Oxford and rose through the ranks to become the
Vatican's indispensable 'Treasurer'. As an outspoken defender of
church orthodoxy, 'Big George's' ascendancy within the clergy was
remarkable and seemingly unstoppable. The Royal Commission into
Institutional Responses to Child Abuse has brought to light
horrific stories about sexual abuse of the most vulnerable and
provoked public anger at the extent of the cover-up. George Pell
has always portrayed himself as the first man in the Church to
tackle the problem. But questions about what the Cardinal knew, and
when, have persisted. The nation's most prominent Catholic is now
the subject of a police investigation into allegations spanning
decades that he too abused children. Louise Milligan is the only
Australian journalist who has been privy to the most intimate
stories of complainants. She pieces together a series of disturbing
pictures of the Cardinal's knowledge and his actions, many of which
are being told here for the first time. Conspiracy or cover-up?
Cardinal uncovers uncomfortable truths about a culture of sexual
entitlement, abuse of trust and how ambition can silence evil.
In Precarious Battle tells how labour broking was defeated in the South African Post Office (SAPO). Labour broking has become synonymous with worker exploitation. By 2011, a third of SAPO’s workforce was employed through labour brokers. These ‘casuals’ worked alongside permanent employees, some for over a decade, but for a quarter of the salary.
David Dickinson shares the story of how labour broking provided cheap and compliant labour, and how the use of labour brokers in SAPO divided the workplace and the workforce. He charts the attempts of casuals to organise within the law and how their efforts were defeated at every turn. He describes the increasing ferocity of the wildcat strikes that followed and explains how eventually 294 casuals, the Mabarete, fought their own battle and ended labour broking.
This book reflects on how labour broking created misery for those trapped in precarious employment, how the Constitution failed casual workers and how the South African industrial relations system is unravelling.
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Hardcover
R595
Discovery Miles 5 950
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