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Originally published in 1904 and reprinted many times subsequently,
this book contains the ancient Greek text of Demosthenes' On the
Crown. The text is edited with a critical commentary by William
Watson Goodwin, and a detailed historical sketch of the speech's
context is supplied at the end. This book will be of value to
anyone with an interest in Demosthenes or the history of classical
scholarship.
The care and management of mentally disordered offenders poses a
major challenge to criminal justice agencies and psychiatric
services. These patients, ???the people nobody owns???, are
particularly vulnerable to political and professional change and as
psychiatric services become increasingly community-based, the task
of meeting the needs of the offender, as well as expectations of
public protection, becomes a more difficult prospect. This book
brings together the papers and a summary of the discussion
presented at a Cropwood Round Table conference organized by the
Institute of Criminology and the Department of Psychiatry of the
University of Cambridge. Seeking to define future needs and
directions in legal and service provisions, it includes
perspectives from the fields of criminology, sociology and social
psychiatry, and contributions from practitioners and
administrators. Remarkable for the tenacity and depth with which
the expert contributors address the problems, this is essential
reading for all professionals working in the psychiatric and
criminal justice systems with this frequently marginalized client
group. Through a searching examination of the situation within one
jurisdiction it points the way to service developments, improved
care management and research opportunities that have universal
applications.
The care and management of mentally disordered offenders poses a major challenge to criminal justice agencies and psychiatric services. These patients, ‘the people nobody owns’, are particularly vulnerable to political and professional change and as psychiatric services become increasingly community-based, the task of meeting the needs of the offender, as well as expectations of public protection, becomes a more difficult prospect. This book brings together the papers and a summary of the discussion presented at a Cropwood Round Table conference organised by the Institute of Criminology and the Department of Psychiatry of the University of Cambridge. Seeking to define future needs and directions in legal and service provisions, it includes perspectives from the fields of criminology, sociology and social psychiatry, as well as contributions from practitioners and administrators. Remarkable for the tenacity and depth with which the expert contributors address the problems, this volume will be essential reading for all professionals working in the psychiatric and criminal justice systems with this frequently marginalized client group. Through a searching examination of the situation within one jurisdiction it points the way to service developments, improved care management and new research opportunities that have universal applications.
This book is the first in a major three-volume series that will
survey China's immense wealth of art, architecture, and artifacts
from prehistoric times to the twentieth century. The Arts of China
to A.D. 900 investigates the beginnings of the traditions on which
much of the art rests, moving from Neolithic and Bronze Age China
to the era of the Tang Dynasty around A.D. 900. William Watson
discusses in lively detail a wide range of art forms and
techniques: porcelain and pottery, lacquer, religious and secular
painting and sculpture, mural painting, monumental sculpture and
architecture. He explains the materials and techniques of bronze
casting, jade carving, pottery manufacture, and other arts, and he
describes the most important sites, the artifacts that were
produced at each one, and the historical interactions between
different areas. He discusses the iconography, the technique and
the function of every art form. Written by one of the most
distinguished scholars in the field of Chinese art and archaeology,
this lavishly illustrated book will be a valuable resource for both
experts and beginners in the field.
Twelve Steps for White America: For a United States of America
answers the revolutionary call of James Baldwin in "The Fire Next
Time" for new standards for white Americans. Educator and former
psychotherapist William Watson presents a treatment plan for
democracy, an innovative framework of steps white Americans can
take (and all individuals and organizations can incorporate) to
right our nation's course to peace and prosperity through justice
then liberty for all. The problem: Watson's Rigged Advantage Theory
presents U.S. democracy as compromised by advantage rigged to favor
some, exploit others, and marginalize many. Rigged advantage
operates a whiteness inclusion-collusion that relies on two
codependent strategies-white supremacy and anti-Blackness. The
solution: Address elements of dysfunction common to both rigged
advantage and alcoholism. Apply 12 steps of known recovery
principles to unshackle the past, promote U.S. security and global
competitiveness, and eliminate race as a predictor of democracy's
outcomes. Twelve Steps for White America maps a pathway to truth,
reconciliation, and renewal forged in a crucible of national
repentance, atonement, and redemption. Use #12SWA to join the
conversation. Visit William Watson's website for more information
on Twelve Steps for White America, blog posts on critical topics
liked rigged advantage, and information regarding speaking
engagements and consulting: williamwatson.org.
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