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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
In this unique book, Sten Soederman explores the prospect of China
reaching its goal of hosting the 2050 World Cup. Soederman takes
into consideration China's size, resources, traditions and
political system to ask what needs to be done and how. The book
assesses football in China today, discussing the main driving
forces behind the development of football in China, and offering an
analysis of its organizational structure, strengths, regulations,
and weaknesses. Taking a comparative approach, Soederman asks if
China should simply adopt the European model of football, including
values and skills, through imported players and coaches, or if it
is better for China to forge its own path by building on its
traditions and limiting the possibility of investing in foreign
players, coaches and foreign football clubs. Looking to the future,
the book outlines new models and tools to analyse the
footballization of China. Soederman concludes with the argument
that grassroots activity is the most critical factor in the
development of football in China. Examining if a strategic
management mix will help China win the 2050 World Cup, this book
will be a valuable resource for scholars and students of sport
management and Asian business studies.
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The Resting Place (Paperback)
Camilla Sten; Translated by Alexandra Fleming
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R496
R434
Discovery Miles 4 340
Save R62 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Measuring Sustainable Development Goals Performance provides a
quantitative and analytical framework for evaluating social,
economic, and environmental policies aiming at the UN sustainable
development goals (SDGs). Continuing their earlier work on
multidimensional analysis, the authors demonstrate how nations can
be ranked in terms of their performance in meeting a given set of
SDGs, providing numerical calculation of SDGs deficit. Their
calculations show that even before the arrival of the COVID-19
virus, there existed in several large Western nations undetected
pockets of SDG deficits, such as in the care for the elderly,
personal safety, and hygiene. Extending the calculations to cover
COVID-19 data for 2020, it turns out that the same deficit nations
also suffered excess death rates caused by the virus. This book
offers a balanced and holistic paradigm for evaluating progress of
the SDGs, assisting the convergence of national and international
efforts toward economic development, social progress, and
environmental protection.
Cromwell and Communism (1930) examines the English revolution
against the absolute monarchy of Charles I. It looks at the
economic and social conditions prevailing at the time, the first
beginnings of dissent and the religious and political aims of the
Parliamentarian side in the revolution and subsequent civil war.
The various sects are examined, including the Levellers and their
democratic, atheistic and communistic ideals.
Melville's Other Lives is the first book-length study on The Piazza
Tales-Herman Melville's only authorized collection of short fiction
published in his lifetime-and the first book to explore the rich
and varied subject of embodiment in any published collection of
Melville's stories. As Christopher Sten shows, all of the stories
in The Piazza Tales present encounters between established white
male figures: a writer, a lawyer, a ship captain, a homeowner, an
architect, a world traveler, and characters who are outsiders,
minorities, outcasts, or "others": a seamstress, an office drudge,
enslaved Africans, a traveling salesman, island castaways, the
poor. In each, Melville concentrates on the trials of the human
body, its pain and trauma, its struggles and frustrations. Some
tales concern common trials such as illness or invalidism ("The
Piazza"), the tedium of office work ("Bartleby"), or the
aggravation of door-to-door salesmen ("The Lightning-Rod Man").
Others concern extraordinary trials: the traumatic violence of a
rebellion on a slave ship ("Benito Cereno"), the hardships of
surviving on a wasteland archipelago ("The Encantadas"), the perils
of creating a monstrous "man-machine" ("The Bell-Tower"). In their
concern for the cultural meanings of such trials, Melville's
stories look forward to the work of Michel Foucault, Raymond
Williams, and other cultural materialists who have shown how
cultures define, control, and oppress bodies based on their
otherness. As a storyteller, Melville understood how such cultural
dynamics operate and seized on our collective obsession with the
human body as subject, symbol, and vehicle to dramatize his tales.
The euphoria evidenced in the aftermath of the collapse of
communist regimes in the late 1980s and early 1990s sometimes
conveyed the impression that the process of democratization would
be achieved without difficulty or tribulation. This book sets out
to provide a thorough comparative analysis of the challenges which
face the emerging democracies of Central and Eastern Europe and
considers the impact of political change. Drawing heavily on
available survey data, the book provides an in-depth account of how
the new democracies of Central and Eastern Europe have coped with
four major challenges: political fragmentation, nationalism, lack
of respect for human rights, and poorly developed civil service
systems. The book demonstrates that although the first few years of
the 1990s were marked by increasing disenchantment with the new
regimes, the change of governments as a direct result of the
electoral process and the prospects for European integration have
served to reverse this negative trend. Indeed, the authors find
that the new political systems have managed to cope with the
challenges so effectively that striking similarities with Western
democracies are now apparent. Offering new insights into democratic
transition, Challenges to Democracy will appeal to political
scientists, diplomats and policymakers, and economists with an
interest in European and comparative politics.
As Rynning shows, armed forces have a natural interest in
shaping military doctrine according to their resources, doctrinal
traditions, as well as their assessment of the international
environment. However, armed forces are also the instrument of
policy-makers who are in charge of national security. Using
civil-military relations in France from 1958 to the present as a
case study, he shows when policy-makers are capable of controlling
military doctrine as well as the means armed forces rely on to
influence doctrine.
Some scholars argue that policy-makers can control military
doctrine only when the international environment is threatening--a
situation granting them added decision-making authority. Others
argue that such control ultimately depends on the degree of
domestic political disagreement/consensus. With access to most of
the leading military personnel and policy-makers of the era,
Rynning provides an analysis that will be instructive to scholars
as well as policy-makers and military leaders concerned with
contemporary civil-military relations.
"Accounting for Improvement" offers concrete and constructive
demonstrations of the possibilities of designing participative
forms of organization. Field experiment cases illustrate how the
operational level can assume a new significance in competitiveness
and strategic positioning. In this way, the relevance of the
accounting function to the improvement of productivity and quality
is restored.
Several broadly applicable lessons can be learnt, among them:
how companies can strengthen their competitive base by patient
improvement; how people with operative jobs can take command of
their work situation and improve it in quality as well as
efficiency.
New bottom-up, people-orientated, empirically-founded approaches
to decentralised participative management demonstrate a place for
individuals and teamwork in today's "lost relevance" and "smart
machine" environment.
This book focuses on photography within the social research field,
building a solid foundation for photography as a social research
method and describing different techniques and applications of
photo research. It provides a comprehensive approach to research
photography, from preparation and the ethical considerations that
need to be understood prior to going into the field, to collecting
data, analysis and preparing research for publication. It also
introduces artistic genres of photography to help readers with the
choices they make when pursuing photographic research and as a
reminder that when collecting photographs that they are in fact
producing art. The ethical issues examined place a new focus on
dignity and considerations of participant anonymity and
recognition, informed consent, working with vulnerable groups,
unequal power relationships and possible intervention. Combining
preparation and ethics, it examines how best to collect and take
good photographs, and explores the practical issues of stigma and
introduces Verstaendnis (german: understanding) to aid researchers
in the field. Subsequently, the book discusses the different
photo-analytical approaches for researchers and provides examples
of how to analyse photographs using the different techniques.
Lastly, it offers guidelines, with examples, for researchers
wanting to publish their work.
This work uses techniques of optimization and operations research
to develop the first comprehensive survey of the entire field of
the optimization of resource, production, and distribution systems.
Sten Thore proposes an "economic logistics" that is similar to the
well-known concept of military logistics, but which is expanded to
include such features as the optimal location of plants,
inventories and retail outlets, and the management of hierarchical
multi-echelon production, inventory, and distribution systems. The
study of individual features of this supply process is familiar
from operations research, but Thore joins these elements together
into larger analytic structures encompassing the production and
distribution system in an entire industry. Following an
introductory chapter and a review of the saddle-point theory,
coauthored with W. W. Cooper, Thore explores the three dimensions
of the supply process synthesis: the spatial dimension (as in
simple transportation systems), the vertical dimension (extending
from resources to finished consumer goods, as in activity
analysis), and the time dimension (as in inventory accumulation and
investment). The combination of these then leads to models of such
diverse subjects as regional warehouse systems, activity analysis
and activity networks, multi-stage warehouse systems of
intermediate goods, distribution networks, and spatial equilibrium.
Each chapter contains its own exercises which are solved
numerically and discussed in great detail, and illustrate such
optimization techniques as linear and nonlinear programming, goal
programming and goal focusing, chance-constrained programming, and
infinite games. This work is designed for use ingraduate courses in
economics and mathematics modeling, and will also be a useful
addition to college and university library collections.
In October of 2011, CLSI published a new guideline EP23A on
"Laboratory Quality Control Based on Risk Management.? In March,
2012, CMS announced its intention to incorporate key concepts from
EP23A into its Interpretative Guidelines and QC policy for
"Individualized Quality Control Plans.? Thus begins a new era of
Quality Control in the Age of Risk Management. This issue is
intended to help laboratories with the transition between
traditional QC practices and the new risk management approach.
Laboratories face a steep learning curve to apply risk analysis for
identifying and prioritizing failure-modes, developing and
implementing control mechanisms to detect those failure-modes, and
assessing the acceptability of the residual risks that exist after
implementation of a QC Plan. One of the main benefits of the new
risk analysis based QC Plans should be an integration of all the
control mechanisms that are needed to monitor the total testing
process, including pre-analytic, analytic, and post-analytic
controls.? One of the main risks of the new approach is an
expectation that Statistical QC is no longer important, even though
SQC still remains the most useful and flexible approach for
monitoring the quality of the analytic process. The key to the
future is the successful integration of all these control
mechanisms to provide a cost-effective quality system that monitors
all phases of the total testing process. This issue should help
laboratories understand the evolution of QC practices to include
risk management, but also to recognize the need to maintain
traditional techniques such as Statistical QC, especially during
the transition to well-designed and carefully-validated QC Plans.
Risk analysis may be risky business unless laboratories proceed
carefully and cautiously.
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