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For much of the 20th century, Catholics in Ireland spent
significant amounts of time engaged in religious activities. This
book documents their experience in Limerick city between the 1920s
and 1960s, exploring the connections between that experience and
the wider culture of an expanding and modernising urban
environment. Sile de Cleir discusses topics including ritual
activities in many contexts: the church, the home, the school, the
neighbourhood and the workplace. The supernatural belief
underpinning these activities is also important, along with
creative forms of resistance to the high levels of social control
exercised by the clergy in this environment. De Cleir uses a
combination of in-depth interviews and historical ethnographic
sources to reconstruct the day-to-day religious experience of
Limerick city people during the period studied. This material is
enriched by ideas drawn from anthropological studies of religion,
while perspectives from both history and ethnology also help to
contextualise the discussion. With its unique focus on everyday
experience, and combination of a traditional worldview with the
modernising city of Limerick - all set against the backdrop of a
newly-independent Ireland - Popular Catholicism in 20th-century
Ireland presents a fascinating new perspective on 20th-century
Irish social and religious history.
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Mennonites in Dialogue (Hardcover)
Fernando Enns, Jonathan Seiling; Foreword by Cesar Garcia
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R2,255
R1,794
Discovery Miles 17 940
Save R461 (20%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The term organizational advocacy offers a new way to look at the
interaction between people and their organizations. What each of us
thinks, says, does in the workplace, and the things we appreciate
and the things that displease us-- according to organizational
advocacy--really matter. Organizational advocacy puts
responsibility and accountability for achievement where it should
be, not with some distant manager but on us as individuals.
Seiling's book is an easily understood tour of this challenging new
concept and how it works from the ground up. Seldom has it been
made so clear, as Seiling does here, that we and our organizations
really are one.
Seiling begins by introducing organizational advocacy and its
foundation upon task performance and partnering relationships.
Seiling agrees that readers will have questions and concerns, and
that barriers to just understanding OA, let alone using it, do
exist. She maintains that the activities contributing to or among
high performance systems have been ignored in the past. Management
simply assumed that the people they hired were automatically
contributive and automatically capable of productive relationships.
This serious misreading leads to misunderstood expectations of
people, disconnection from the organization, and eventually to
deteriorated productivity. Seiling summarizes all this in six
subsets, making clear that personal responsibility, distributed
accountability, and shared leadership are vital to an
organization's health and performance. Using cases drawn from some
of the nation's most respected companies and public organizations,
Seiling makes an important contribution to the practice of human
resource management, and to executive understanding of how to make
organizations more productive.
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Associative and Non-Associative Algebras and Applications - 3rd MAMAA, Chefchaouen, Morocco, April 12-14, 2018 (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
Mercedes Siles Molina, Laiachi El Kaoutit, Mohamed Louzari, L'moufadal Ben Yakoub, Mohamed Benslimane
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R2,975
Discovery Miles 29 750
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book gathers together selected contributions presented at the
3rd Moroccan Andalusian Meeting on Algebras and their Applications,
held in Chefchaouen, Morocco, April 12-14, 2018, and which reflects
the mathematical collaboration between south European and north
African countries, mainly France, Spain, Morocco, Tunisia and
Senegal. The book is divided in three parts and features
contributions from the following fields: algebraic and analytic
methods in associative and non-associative structures; homological
and categorical methods in algebra; and history of mathematics.
Covering topics such as rings and algebras, representation theory,
number theory, operator algebras, category theory, group theory and
information theory, it opens up new avenues of study for graduate
students and young researchers. The findings presented also appeal
to anyone interested in the fields of algebra and mathematical
analysis.
This Palgrave Pivot analyzes how six countries in Central
America-Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and
Panama-connected to and through computer networks such as UUCP,
BITNET and the Internet from the 80s to the year 2000. It argues
that this story can only be told from a transnational perspective.
To connect to computer networks, Central America built a regional
integration project with great implications for its development. By
revealing the beginnings of the Internet in this part of the world,
this study broadens our understanding of the development of
computer networks in the global south. It also demonstrates that
transnational flows of knowledge, data, and technologies are a
constitutive feature of the historical development of the Internet.
With the stagnation of the Doha Round of multilateral talks, trade
liberalisation is increasingly undertaken through free trade
agreements. Gabriel Siles-Brugge examines the EU's decision
following the 2006 'Global Europe' strategy to negotiate such
agreements with emerging economies. Eschewing the purely
materialist explanations prominent in the field, he develops a
novel constructivist argument to highlight the role of language and
ideas in shaping EU trade policy. Drawing on extensive interviews
and documentary analysis, Siles-Brugge shows how EU trade
policymakers have privileged the interests of exporters to the
detriment of import-competing groups, creating an ideational
imperative for market-opening. Even during the on-going economic
crisis the overriding mantra has been that the EU's future
well-being depends on its ability to compete in global markets. The
increasingly neoliberal orientation of EU trade policy has also had
important consequences for its economic diplomacy with the
developing economies of the African, Caribbean and Pacific group of
states.
Presenting the collaborations of over thirty international experts
in the latest developments in pure and applied mathematics, this
volume serves as an anthology of research with a common basis in
algebra, functional analysis and their applications. Special
attention is devoted to non-commutative algebras, non-associative
algebras, operator theory and ring and module theory. These themes
are relevant in research and development in coding theory,
cryptography and quantum mechanics. The topics in this volume were
presented at the Workshop on Non-Associative & Non-Commutative
Algebra and Operator Theory, held May 23-25, 2014 at Cheikh Anta
Diop University in Dakar, Senegal in honor of Professor Amin Kaidi.
The workshop was hosted by the university's Laboratory of Algebra,
Cryptology, Algebraic Geometry and Applications, in cooperation
with the University of Almeria and the University of Malaga. Dr.
Kaidi's work focuses on non-associative rings and algebras,
operator theory and functional analysis, and he has served as a
mentor to a generation of mathematicians in Senegal and around the
world.
This scholarly biography and collection of writings by and about an
early leader of the Hutterites, a pacifist communal Anabaptist
group, sheds light on a persecuted religious minority during the
Reformation. This comprehensive, annotated collection of Jakob
Hutter’s letters and related documents begins with an extensive
biography of Hutter and his wife Katharina, based on recent
archival research. This introduction serves to contextualize the
Hutterite movement, a communal and pacifist Anabaptist group that
emerged as part of the Radical Reformation in sixteenth-century
Tyrol and Moravia. The main text of the book opens with Hutter’s
eight surviving letters, newly translated directly from the
seventeenth-century codices where they have been preserved. As the
leader of a scattered, persecuted movement, Hutter wrote pastoral
letters of encouragement and admonition to various congregations in
Tyrol and Moravia. The second chapter consists of material from
Hutterite chronicles that describe Hutter’s life and context.
Some of these are previously unpublished; in all cases, new
translations have been made from the original codices. The third
chapter is a collection of reports on government interrogations of
Anabaptists who describe Hutter’s missionary activity, typically
written by a state official during an interrogation process which
often involved torture. Chapter four is a compilation of writings
by fellow Hutterites written during Hutter’s life and in the
decade after his death, which show the importance of Hutter’s
life and teachings. The fifth chapter includes internal
correspondence between government authorities trying to suppress
the Anabaptist movement. The accounts offer insight into the
government’s perspective on the significance of Hutter and the
Anabaptist communities in his spheres of activity. Additional
documents relating to Hutter’s death and legacy from both within
and outside of the Hutterite tradition are included in a final
chapter. This meticulously researched volume, peer-reviewed for
inclusion in the Classics of the Radical Reformations series, is a
valuable contribution to the scholarship of a volatile and fruitful
chapter of church history.
Networked Selves is an original analysis of one of the most
defining cultural features of our time: how people turn to the Web
to construct a public self. It examines the trajectory of a
practice that embodies this sociocultural shift in fundamental
ways: blogging. The book traces the evolution of the Web as a means
to publicly perform a self through an analysis of the emergence,
development, and transformation of blogging from the mid-1990s to
the early years of the 2010s. It discusses processes that have
shaped practices of subjectivity on the Web over two decades in two
countries: the United States and France. Through this comparative
analysis, the book shows that the cultural identity of blogging as
a practice of subjectivity in these countries is neither inevitable
nor neutral. Instead, it demonstrates that the development of the
Web required the forging of various articulations between specific
conceptions of self, publicness, and technology. These
articulations were responses to both transformations in the daily
life of actors and larger economic, political, and cultural
processes-notably neoliberalization. The book also explains how the
cultural imaginary around blogs came into being in the United
States and how it has also functioned as a model for actors in
other countries, such as France. Networked Selves discusses how and
why actors in the technology field in France have gradually
abandoned traditional makers of exceptionalism that were key in the
development of the country's national identity and favored notions
that characterize the United States instead.
Positive organizational change does not have to be planned or
managed top down in a linear, urgent manner. Rather, it can be
"unleashed" or discovered by helping people within organizations to
identify their own best experiences in the past, and then use them
to imagine, design, and bring into being the organization they most
want and which works best. The method is called "Appreciative
Inquiry." The volume editors and their panel of experts examine how
AI works in practice, and how its many (and often surprising)
benefits can be realized in just about any organization. The result
is a major explication and source book for HR and organizational
development specialists and upper level management trying to lead
effective change. Detailed case reports from the field show how
this unique approach is actually applied and what its consequences
are. Readers will learn to identify the "positive core" of any
system--the practices and principles that encourage the best in
organizational capacity and performance. They will find not only
specific outcomes but also some detailed reflections by
practitioners on the use of Appreciative Inquiry. A volume summary
lays out the themes and lesson that span the cases. Also presented
are powerful and novel propositions on how to approach the crucial
issues in organizational change. The result is a major explication
and source book for HR and organizational development specialists.
Essays analyzing a variety of communities in New York offer a
unique and multifaceted view of the Empire State during the Federal
period.
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Associative and Non-Associative Algebras and Applications - 3rd MAMAA, Chefchaouen, Morocco, April 12-14, 2018 (Paperback, 1st ed. 2020)
Mercedes Siles Molina, Laiachi El Kaoutit, Mohamed Louzari, L'moufadal Ben Yakoub, Mohamed Benslimane
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R2,944
Discovery Miles 29 440
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This book gathers together selected contributions presented at the
3rd Moroccan Andalusian Meeting on Algebras and their Applications,
held in Chefchaouen, Morocco, April 12-14, 2018, and which reflects
the mathematical collaboration between south European and north
African countries, mainly France, Spain, Morocco, Tunisia and
Senegal. The book is divided in three parts and features
contributions from the following fields: algebraic and analytic
methods in associative and non-associative structures; homological
and categorical methods in algebra; and history of mathematics.
Covering topics such as rings and algebras, representation theory,
number theory, operator algebras, category theory, group theory and
information theory, it opens up new avenues of study for graduate
students and young researchers. The findings presented also appeal
to anyone interested in the fields of algebra and mathematical
analysis.
"The most ambitious, thoughtful and internationally aware
assessment to date of the creative economy. Defining creativity as
the production of newness in complex, adaptive systems, the authors
make the case that together the creative economy, along with other
cultural outputs, represent a planet-wide innovation capability
which marks an epochal turn in human affairs." - Ian Hargreaves,
CBE, Professor of Digital Economy, Cardiff University Creativity,
new ideas and innovation - and with them the growth of knowledge -
have spilled out of the lab, studio and factory into the street,
scene, and social media. Now, everyday life is productive, everyone
is creative, and new ideas can come from anywhere around the world.
Instead of confining cultural expression to talented artists and
expert professionals, this book investigates creative new ideas
from everyone. Instead of confining the 'creative industries' to
one sector of the economy and one type of productivity, this book
extends the idea of creative innovation to everything. Instead of
confining the growth of knowledge to wealthy countries or markets,
this book looks for it in developing and emergent countries,
everywhere. The productivity of creativity can now be seen as a
global phenomenon. It demands a systems-based and dynamic mode of
explanation. Creative Economy and Culture pursues the conceptual,
historical, practical, critical and educational issues and
implications. It looks at conceptual challenges, the forces and
dynamics of change, and prospects for the future of creative work
at planetary scale. It is essential reading for upper level
students and researchers of the creative and cultural industries
across media and cultural studies, communication and sociology.
Presenting the collaborations of over thirty international experts
in the latest developments in pure and applied mathematics, this
volume serves as an anthology of research with a common basis in
algebra, functional analysis and their applications. Special
attention is devoted to non-commutative algebras, non-associative
algebras, operator theory and ring and module theory. These themes
are relevant in research and development in coding theory,
cryptography and quantum mechanics. The topics in this volume were
presented at the Workshop on Non-Associative & Non-Commutative
Algebra and Operator Theory, held May 23-25, 2014 at Cheikh Anta
Diop University in Dakar, Senegal in honor of Professor Amin Kaidi.
The workshop was hosted by the university's Laboratory of Algebra,
Cryptology, Algebraic Geometry and Applications, in cooperation
with the University of Almeria and the University of Malaga. Dr.
Kaidi's work focuses on non-associative rings and algebras,
operator theory and functional analysis, and he has served as a
mentor to a generation of mathematicians in Senegal and around the
world.
This book offers a comprehensive introduction by three of the
leading experts in the field, collecting fundamental results and
open problems in a single volume. Since Leavitt path algebras were
first defined in 2005, interest in these algebras has grown
substantially, with ring theorists as well as researchers working
in graph C*-algebras, group theory and symbolic dynamics attracted
to the topic. Providing a historical perspective on the subject,
the authors review existing arguments, establish new results, and
outline the major themes and ring-theoretic concepts, such as the
ideal structure, Z-grading and the close link between Leavitt path
algebras and graph C*-algebras. The book also presents key lines of
current research, including the Algebraic Kirchberg Phillips
Question, various additional classification questions, and
connections to noncommutative algebraic geometry. Leavitt Path
Algebras will appeal to graduate students and researchers working
in the field and related areas, such as C*-algebras and symbolic
dynamics. With its descriptive writing style, this book is highly
accessible.
This is a highly original study of the ethical concern that defines
Husserl's phenomenology and motivates its development. "The Ethics
of Husserl's Phenomenology" aims to relocate the question of ethics
at the very heart of Husserl's phenomenology. This is based on the
idea that Husserl's phenomenology is an epistemological inquiry
ultimately motivated by an ethical demand that pervades his writing
from the publication of "Logical Investigations" (1900-1901) up to
"The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology"
(1935). Joaquim Siles-Borras traces the ethical concepts apparent
throughout Husserl's main body of work and argues that Husserl's
phenomenology of consciousness, experience and meaning is
ultimately motivated by an ethical demand, by means of which
Husserl aims to re-define philosophy and re-found science, with the
aim of making philosophy and science capable of dealing with the
most pressing questions concerning the meaningfulness of human
existence. "Continuum Studies in Continental Philosophy" presents
cutting-edge scholarship in the field of modern European thought.
The wholly original arguments, perspectives and research findings
in titles in this series make it an important and stimulating
resource for students and academics from across the discipline.
Networked Selves is an original analysis of one of the most
defining cultural features of our time: how people turn to the Web
to construct a public self. It examines the trajectory of a
practice that embodies this sociocultural shift in fundamental
ways: blogging. The book traces the evolution of the Web as a means
to publicly perform a self through an analysis of the emergence,
development, and transformation of blogging from the mid-1990s to
the early years of the 2010s. It discusses processes that have
shaped practices of subjectivity on the Web over two decades in two
countries: the United States and France. Through this comparative
analysis, the book shows that the cultural identity of blogging as
a practice of subjectivity in these countries is neither inevitable
nor neutral. Instead, it demonstrates that the development of the
Web required the forging of various articulations between specific
conceptions of self, publicness, and technology. These
articulations were responses to both transformations in the daily
life of actors and larger economic, political, and cultural
processes-notably neoliberalization. The book also explains how the
cultural imaginary around blogs came into being in the United
States and how it has also functioned as a model for actors in
other countries, such as France. Networked Selves discusses how and
why actors in the technology field in France have gradually
abandoned traditional makers of exceptionalism that were key in the
development of the country's national identity and favored notions
that characterize the United States instead.
Tienes en tus manos una obra maestro de riquezas y acontecimientos
vividos por dos jovenes adolescentes llenos de suenos, inquietudes
y sed de sabiduria. Te remontaras a momentos vividos en el pasado y
recordaras momentos inolvidables de tu propia vida. Juan y Walter
descubren tesoros en cada una de sus aventuras y encontraras en
cada una de ellas una invitacion abierta a volver a vivir las tuyas
mientras aprendes verdaderas joyas de auto-ayuda. Cuando el
espiritu humano es liberado, el destello de su libertad atraviesa
las paredes de la duda, la desesperanza y el dolor. -0- Todo cuanto
nuestros ojos ven, todo cuanto nuestros sentidos sienten todo por
cuanto nuestro corazon palpita ha sido un sueno alguna vez. -0-
Nunca tengas miedo de emprender tus viajes, porque ellos te
llevaran mas alla de lo que imaginas. -0- Dale rienda suelta a tu
imaginacion y atesoraras recuerdos en tu corazon. -0- Mira a tu
alrededor y encontraras esperanza, veras la esperanza de una flor
en la semilla seca por el suelo veras la esperanza de un oceano en
la solitaria gota de agua del rocio veras la esperanza de un gran
ser humano en el humilde corazon de aquel frente al espejo. -0-
Puedes buscar en las alturas de las montanas en la profundidad de
los oceanos en las vastas extensiones de los valles pero si no
buscas en tu corazon no encontraras los mejores tesoros de la
Creacion
With the stagnation of the Doha Round of multilateral talks, trade
liberalisation is increasingly undertaken through free trade
agreements. Gabriel Siles-Brugge examines the EU's decision
following the 2006 'Global Europe' strategy to negotiate such
agreements with emerging economies. Eschewing the purely
materialist explanations prominent in the field, he develops a
novel constructivist argument to highlight the role of language and
ideas in shaping EU trade policy. Drawing on extensive interviews
and documentary analysis, Siles-Brugge shows how EU trade
policymakers have privileged the interests of exporters to the
detriment of import-competing groups, creating an ideational
imperative for market-opening. Even during the on-going economic
crisis the overriding mantra has been that the EU's future
well-being depends on its ability to compete in global markets. The
increasingly neoliberal orientation of EU trade policy has also had
important consequences for its economic diplomacy with the
developing economies of the African, Caribbean and Pacific group of
states.
Synthesis & Properties of Heterocyclic Compounds
|
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