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This core textbook on human resource development (HRD) focusses on
a topic that has emerged as one of the most dynamic and
multifaceted areas of business and management for both academics
and practitioners. Providing an engaging and succinct discussion of
the topic, this textbook tackles HRD from a basic introductory
level, covering the major areas of HRD, including strategic HRD,
the interaction between leadership, talent management and HRD, and
HRD in large and small enterprises. With a unique blend of theory
and practice, alongside innovative learning tools such as videos
and active case studies, this text will help students to succeed in
their HRD courses and to develop important practical skills for
their future career. This is the perfect textbook for first and
second year undergraduate students, as well as for post-experience
students, studying introductory modules on Human Resource
Development, Training and Development, or Learning and Development.
Accompanying online resources for this title can be found at
bloomsburyonlineresources.com/human-resource-development. These
resources are designed to support teaching and learning when using
this textbook and are available at no extra cost.
The first history of schooling gathered as a single and continuous text since the 1980s. It is also the first attempt to put together a history of South African schooling from the perspective of the subjugated people.
It attempts to show, as South Africa moves from a landscape essentially marked by encounters of people at different frontiers – physical, geographical, economic, cultural and psychological (where only the first two have previously received real attention) – how education is conceptualised, mobilised and used by all the players in the emerging country from the colonial Dutch and British periods into apartheid.
This book covers the period of the history of South African schooling from the establishment of the first school in 1658 to 1910 when South Africa became a Union. It approaches the task of narrating this history as a deliberate intervention. The intervention is that of restoring into the narrative the place of the subjugated people in the unfolding of a landscape which they share with a racialised white community. Propelled by a post-colonial framing of South Africa’s history, it offers itself as a deliberate counter to dominant historiographic and systematic privileging of the country’s elites. As such, it works on a larger canvas than simply the school. It deliberately works the story of schooling alongside the bigger socioeconomic history of South Africa, i.e., Dutch settlement of the Cape, the arrival of colonial Britain and the dramatic discovery of gold and diamonds leading to the industrialisation of South Africa. The story of schooling, the text seeks to emphasise, cannot be told independently of what is going on economically, politically and socially in the making of modern South Africa. Modernity, as a consequence, is a major theme of the book.
In telling the story of formal schooling in South Africa, the text, critically, seeks to retrieve the experience of the subjugated to present a wider and larger canvas upon which to describe the process of the making of the South African school. The text works historically with the Dutch East Indian experience up until 1804 when schooling was characterised by its neglect. It shows then how it develops a systematic character through the institutionalisation of a formal system in 1839 and the initiatives of missionaries. It draws the story to a close by looking at how formal systems are established in the colonies, the Boer Republics and the protectorates.
Thematically, the text seeks to thread through the conceits of race and class to show how, contradictorily, they take expression through conflict and struggle. In this conflict and struggle people who are not white (i.e., they do not yet have the racialised labels that apartheid brings in the middle of the 20th century) are systematically marginalised and discriminated against. They work with their discrimination, however, in generative ways by taking opportunity when it arises and exercising political agency.
The book is important because it explains the roots of educational inequality. It shows how inequality is systematically installed in almost every step of the way. For a period, in the middle of the 19th century, attempts were made to forestall this inequality. The text shows how the British administration acceded to eugenicist influences which pushed children of colour out of what were called first-class schools into segregated missionary-run institutions.
The Challenges of Intra-Party Democracy provides a comprehensive
examination of both the concept and the practice of intra-party
democracy (IPD). Acknowledging that IPD is now widely viewed, among
both democratic practitioners and scholars, as a normative good,
this volume suggests that there is no single, or uniformly
preferred, form of IPD. Rather, each party's version of IPD results
from a series of choices they make relating to the organization and
division of power internally. These decisions reflect many
variables including a party's democratic ethos, its electoral
context, state regulation and whether or not it is in government.
Individual chapters examine the relationship between party models
and IPD, the decline in party membership and activism, the role of
the state in regulating party democracy, issues relating to gender
and party organization, norms of candidate and leadership
recruitment and selection, party policy development and party
finance. The analysis considers the principal issues that parties
(and the state) must consider relating to IPD in each area of party
activity, the range of options open to them, current trends in
terms of paths chosen, what these choices tell us about parties
and, most importantly, what the implications of these choices are.
In doing so, we offer a common language and set of questions
relating to IPD that enhance the ability for consistent evaluation
of the state of internal party democracy. Through thorough analysis
of associated costs and benefits, we also provide a framework to
assist with considerations of IPD reforms -- particularly in terms
of their scope, the range of options available and their
implications.
Comparative Politics is a series for students, teachers, and
researchers of political science that deals with contemporary
government and politics. Global in scope, books in the series are
characterised by a stress on comparative analysis and strong
methodological rigour. The series is published in association with
the European Consortium for Political Research. For more
information visit: www.ecprnet.eu. The Comparative Politics series
is edited by Professor David M. Farrell, School of Politics and
International Relations, University College Dublin, and Kenneth
Carty, Professor of Political Science, University of British
Columbia.
The Singer's Guide to German Diction is the essential foundation
for a complete course in German diction for singers, vocal coaches,
choral conductors, and anyone wishing to learn to learn the proper
pronunciation of High German. Written by Valentin Lanzrein and
Richard Cross, who each have years of experience on stage, in the
voice studio, and in the diction classroom, it provides an
all-encompassing and versatile reference for the rules of German
diction and their exceptions. Featuring an easily navigable format
that uses tables and charts to support a visual understanding of
the text, this guide allows the reader to find information on
diction rules and quick help with the formation of each sound. It
also places an emphasis on exceptions to the rules, which are
crucial in learning the proper pronunciation of any language.
Exceptions are not only provided with the diction rules, but are
also gathered in a specific section for ease of reference. A
glossary of difficult words, names, and exceptions is provided in
the appendix, along with a section on Latin pronounced in the
German manner. Extensive pronunciation exercises, as well as IPA
transcription worksheets and short examples from the vocal
literature, are used for practical application of the diction
rules, and feature musical exercises drawn from art song, opera,
and oratorio. The book's companion website supplements these
musical exercises with high-quality audio clips recorded by leading
professional singers, providing an invaluable resource for
independent study. A comprehensive companion for teachers,
students, and singers alike, The Singer's Guide to German Diction
brings German diction to life through its well-structured system of
practice and reference materials.
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Viking Quest (DVD)
Jenny Boyd, Nate Fallows, Oliver Walker, Ben Cross, Harry Lister Smith, …
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R102
Discovery Miles 1 020
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Ships in 10 - 25 working days
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Harry Lister Smith stars in this made-for-TV action adventure. On a
remote island in ancient Norway, young Viking Erick (Lister Smith)
volunteers to join a band of his fellow Norse warriors on a
perilous voyage to save the captured princess Tasya (Jenny Boyd).
Fighting together with rival clans, Erick must find and save Tasya
from her captors before she is sacrificed to the legendary Midgard
serpent.
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