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Showing 1 - 25 of
99 matches in All Departments
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A Mind to Kill: Series 3 (DVD)
Philip Madoc, Ffion Wilkins, Sharon Morgan, Gillian Elisa, Ieuan Rhys, …
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R98
Discovery Miles 980
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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All six episodes from the third season of the Welsh crime drama
series starring Philip Madoc as DCI Noel Bain, who relies more on
instinct than scientific evidence to track down criminals. Episodes
are: 'Shadow Falls', 'Box', 'The Inner Life of Strangers', 'Colour
Blind', 'Sound Bites', 'Engineer', 'Blood and Water' and 'The
Little House in the Forest'.
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A Mind to Kill: Series 1 (DVD)
Philip Madoc, Ffion Wilkins, Sharon Morgan, Gillian Elisa, Ieuan Rhys, …
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R55
Discovery Miles 550
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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All six episodes from the first season of the Welsh crime drama
series starring Philip Madoc as DCI Noel Bain, who relies more on
instinct than scientific evidence to track down criminals. Episodes
are: 'White Rocks', 'Black Silence', 'Gameboys', 'Rest Not Secure',
'Son of His Works' and 'Rachel Hardcastle'.
Evidence: Law and Context explains the key concepts of evidence law
in England and Wales clearly and concisely, set against the
backdrop of the broader political and theoretical contexts. The
book focuses on the essential topics commonly found on Evidence
courses covering both criminal evidence and civil evidence. It
takes a contextual approach discussing how wider policy debates and
societal trends have impacted upon the recent evolution of the law
in order to provide students with an explanation as to how and why
the law has developed. The fifth edition has been revised to
include: coverage of R v Hunter 2015 and its impact on good
character evidence; developments in procedures relating to young
and vulnerable witnesses; and more in-depth coverage of key cases.
Learning points summarise the major principles and rules covered
and practical examples are used throughout the text to give better
understanding as to how the technical rules are applied in
practice. Self-test questions are included in the book, helping
students to test their understanding and prepare for assessment.
Well written, clear and with a logical structure throughout, it
contains all the information necessary for any undergraduate
evidence law module.
Project Skills describes the best of the accepted project
management techniques, taking the guesswork out of deciding which
ones to apply at which stage.
The subject of project management has developed over the ages into
a fairly precise set of techniques, definitions and practices that
are applicable to running projects. More and more projects are
being handled by non-specialist project managers. Elbeik and Thomas
present a practical and accessible guide to managing projects of
all sizes, not just large scale ones.
It also presents essential 'people' skills that are vital to making
a project succeed. These include leadership skills, motivating
others to deliver, communicating, holding meetings and how to
manage change.
The New Skills Portfolio is a groundbreaking new series, published
in association with the Industrial Society, which re-defines the
core management skills managers and team leaders need to be
competitive. Each title is action-focused blending 20th century
management initiatives/trends with a new flexible skills portfolio
for managers constantly experiencing and managing organizational
and marketplace change.
The Industrial Society is one of the largest public training
providers in the UK. It has over 10,000 corporate members.
Accessible, practical book on project skills
Includes project manager's toolkit
Especially suitable for non-specialist project managers
A Financial Times Book of the Year. A clear, readable analysis of
the inescapable fact that Generation Y (and subsequent generations)
will be poorer than their parents, and how we should pursue other
economic paths. If you are part of the 99% – and there is a 99%
chance that you are – then you are one of the first generation in
living memory who can expect to be poorer than your parents, even
as the economy continues to grow. And you could be quite a lot
poorer. If we continue as we are going, the civilisation we enjoy
today will not last until 2050. Buying their own house is a distant
dream for most young people; their wages are failing to keep pace
with inflation; and more and more people are having to rely on food
banks. Our age is one of chronic anxiety. If the economy is doing
so well, how can most people not be doing well? If the pie is
growing, why aren't we all getting bigger slices? This book shows
what we, the 99%, can do to end mass impoverishment and build a
society worth living in: an age of abundance, in which everyone
benefits.
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The Bothy (Paperback)
Trevor Mark Thomas
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R313
R234
Discovery Miles 2 340
Save R79 (25%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Tom is grieving for his girlfriend. Her powerful family, convinced
he is responsible for her death, place a bounty on his head. On the
run, Tom seeks refuge in the Bothy, a dilapidated moorland pub run
by ageing gangster Frank. Tom tries to keep the bounty a secret,
but news travels fast, even in the middle of nowhere. Trevor Mark
Thomas's first novel is a tense, violent drama involving desperate
characters with little to lose apart from their lives. Amid moments
of black humour and rare tenderness, buried fears and rivalries
rise to the surface, creating an atmosphere of claustrophobia that
builds to almost unbearable levels.
Advocacy skills, which are learnt in the moot court, as a precursor
to the effective communication of persuasive legal argument, are
essential for those seeking a career in law. The skills associated
with successful mooting, cover the entire range of the domains of
human activity: intellectual, physical and emotional. This
informative book examines the theories relevant to the development
of skills necessary for effective participation in competition
moots. By consideration of underlying theories, Mark Thomas and
Lucy Cradduck develop unique models of the skills of the cognitive,
psychomotor and affective domains and effective team dynamics,
emphasising the importance of written submissions. The authors use
this analysis to develop a unique integrated model that informs the
process of coaching moot teams according to reliable principles.
The Art of Mooting distils the theories and principles that support
successful moot performances, grounding these in practical examples
of how a mooter's skills may be developed and improved. It is an
essential guide for moot coaches, law and advocacy students and
academics seeking to improve their skills, and new and existing
practitioners.
Project Skills describes the best of the accepted project
management techniques, taking the guesswork out of deciding which
ones to apply at which stage. The subject of project management has
developed over the ages into a fairly precise set of techniques,
definitions and practices that are applicable to running projects.
More and more projects are being handled by non-specialist project
managers. Elbeik and Thomas present a practical and accessible
guide to managing projects of all sizes, not just large scale ones.
It also presents essential 'people' skills that are vital to making
a project succeed. These include leadership skills, motivating
others to deliver, communicating, holding meetings and how to
manage change. The New Skills Portfolio is a groundbreaking new
series, published in association with the Industrial Society, which
re-defines the core management skills managers and team leaders
need to be competitive. Each title is action-focused blending 20th
century management initiatives/trends with a new flexible skills
portfolio for managers constantly experiencing and managing
organizational and marketplace change. The Industrial Society is
one of the largest public training providers in the UK. It has over
10,000 corporate members.
Funny, provocative and moving, The Liar's Quartet includes the
scripts with brand new commentary from Mark Thomas' most acclaimed
comic, political theatre. Layered with political insight (and
insult), and peppered with anecdote, this is a bravura performance
in its own right. Each multi-award winning show examines Thomas'
obsession with the bonds that bind us, those of family, friends and
communities. Beginning with Bravo Figaro!, Mark puts on an opera in
his dying father's living room (with the help of Royal Opera House
singers) to explore their relationship. In Cuckooed, he unpicks the
betrayal of a friend and a fellow activist who was in fact employed
to spy for the UK's biggest arms company, BAE systems. And in The
Red Shed, Mark returns to his political roots to harness the power
of collective memory and celebrate the importance of working-class
struggles and narratives in a story he describes as 'a topical tale
about the miners' strike'.
These two volumes provide a range of perspectives on the collapse
of the world economy in the interwar period, a time when problems
of crisis and confrontation drastically affected world economic
performance. During this period, national and international
politics intruded upon global economic relations with more
intensity than before. Trade and finance became instruments of
government policy with the emergence of macroeconomic analyses of
domestic economic performance. While the volumes concentrate on the
major trends in the global economy as a whole, attention is also
paid to developments in particular economies. The editor's
introduction provides a thematic overview of the main questions
raised by this complex period. The Disintegration of the World
Economy Between the World Wars, with its focus upon the period's
newly developing concepts for understanding trade and the
macroeconomy, will be essential reading for understanding the
growth and development of the world economy.
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Under Milk Wood (DVD)
Aneirin Hughes, Sue Roderick, Lisa Palfrey, Charlotte Church, Boyd Clack, …
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R217
Discovery Miles 2 170
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Out of stock
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Kevin Allen directs this erotic comedy adaptation of Dylan Thomas's
1954 radio play. Set in the fictional Welsh fishing village of
Llareggub, the story follows the lives and shenanigans of the
residents who share their thoughts and dreams through the medium of
poetry, including two-time widow Mrs Ogmore-Pritchard (Buddug
Verona James), the music-obsessed Organ Morgan (Aneirin Hughes),
good-time girl Polly Garter (Charlotte Church) and the old, blind
seaman Captain Cat (Rhys Ifans).
In this 1991 volume a distinguished team of international
contributors consider some of the central long-term issues raised
by the problem of income distribution. The Kuznets curve - i.e. the
notion that income distribution became increasingly unequal during
the period of industrialisation, and progressively less unequal
during the drive to maturity - lies at the centre of much of the
analysis, and its relevance is discussed in a wide-ranging series
of articles covering the British, Belgian, German, Australian,
Austrian and American experiences. This volume was the first for
many years to take such a broad, comparative approach to income
distribution, and makes an important and authoritative contribution
to an area of perennial debate.
Written for the WJEC/Eduqas A/AS Level Computer Science
specifications for first teaching from 2015, this print student
book helps students build their knowledge and master underlying
computing principles and concepts. The student book develops
computational thinking, programming and problem-solving skills.
Suitable for all abilities, it puts computing into context and
gives students a real-life view on professional applications of
computing skills. Answers to end-of-chapter questions are located
in the free online teacher's resource. A Cambridge Elevate enhanced
edition is also available.
Walter Lippmann was arguably the most recognized and respected
political journalist of the twentieth century. His "Today and
Tomorrow" columns attracted a global readership of well over ten
million. Lippmann was the author of numerous books, including the
best-selling A Preface to Morals (1929) and U.S. Foreign Policy
(1943). His Public Opinion (1922) remains a classic text within
American political philosophy and media studies. Lippmann coined or
popularized several keywords of the twentieth century, including
"stereotype," the "Cold War," and the "Great Society." Sought out
by U.S. Presidents and by America's allies and rivals around the
world, Lippmann remained one of liberalism's most faithful
proponents and harshest critics. Yet few people then or since
encountered the "real" Walter Lippmann. That was because he kept
crucial parts of himself hiding in plain sight. His extensive
commentary on politics and diplomacy was bounded by his sense that
America had to adjust to the loss of a common faith and morality in
a "post-Christian" era. Over the course of his life, Lippmann
traded in his fame as a happy secularist for the stardom of a
grumpy Western Christian intellectual. Yet he never committed
himself to any religious system, especially his own Jewish
heritage. Walter Lippmann: American Skeptic, American Pastor
considers the role of religions in Lippmann's life and thought,
prioritizing his affirmation and rejection of Christian
nationalisms of the left and right. It also yields fresh insights
into the philosophical origins of modern American liberalism,
including liberalism's blind spots in the areas of sex, race, and
class. But most importantly, this biography highlights the
constructive power of doubt. For Lippmann, the good life in the
good society was lived in irreconcilable tension: the struggle to
be free from yet loyal to a way of life; to recognize the dangers
yet also necessity of a civil religion; and to strive for a just
and enduring world order that can never be. In the end, Lippmann
manufactured himself as the prophet of limitation for an
extravagant American Century.
100 Acts of Minor Dissent is an account of an entire year spent
living provocatively. From successful campaigns against Royal Parks
and multinationals, to arts and crafts with porn mags, from
annoying estate agents, to raising cinema workers' wages, comedian
and campaigner Mark Thomas stopped at nothing. The Acts were
sometimes bold, sometimes surreal. Many brought about change and
others were done for the sheer hell of it. Whether at the gates of
the Saudi Arabian embassy or the checkout at Tesco - people reacted
with laughter, shock, outrage and occasionally anger. Sometimes all
of the above. 100 Acts of Minor Dissent makes for dangerously
inspiring reading.
Evidence: Law and Context explains the key concepts of evidence law
in England and Wales clearly and concisely, set against the
backdrop of the broader political and theoretical contexts. The
book focuses on the essential topics commonly found on Evidence
courses covering both criminal evidence and civil evidence. It
takes a contextual approach discussing how wider policy debates and
societal trends have impacted upon the recent evolution of the law
in order to provide students with an explanation as to how and why
the law has developed. The fifth edition has been revised to
include: coverage of R v Hunter 2015 and its impact on good
character evidence; developments in procedures relating to young
and vulnerable witnesses; and more in-depth coverage of key cases.
Learning points summarise the major principles and rules covered
and practical examples are used throughout the text to give better
understanding as to how the technical rules are applied in
practice. Self-test questions are included in the book, helping
students to test their understanding and prepare for assessment.
Well written, clear and with a logical structure throughout, it
contains all the information necessary for any undergraduate
evidence law module.
This authoritative guide to the use of quantitative methods is designed to be used as the basic text for graduate courses, and is also suitable for upper-level students. Making History Count is written by two senior economic historians with considerable international teaching experience. The text is clearly illustrated with numerous tables, graphs and diagrams, leading the student through the various key topics. It is supported by five specific historical data-sets, available electronically in downloadable and manipulable form.
An analysis - and celebration - of the NHS as it turns 70. Based on
a series of interviews with leading experts in and on the NHS and
residencies in hospitals and surgeries and with director Nick Kent,
Thomas uses his own demise to explore the state we're in, and what
the future might hold for all of us.
In 50 Things About Us, Mark Thomas combines his trademark mix of
storytelling, stand-up, mischief and really, really well-researched
material to examine how we have come to inhabit this divided
wasteland that some of us call the United Kingdom. Based on his
latest show, 50 Things About Us, Mark picks through the myths,
historical facts and current figures of our national identities to
ask: who do we think we are?
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