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How do we maintain core values and rights when governments impose
restrictive measures on our lives? Declaring a state of emergency
is the best way to protect public health in a pandemic but how do
these powers differ from those for national security and economic
crises? This book explores how human rights, democracy and the rule
of law can be protected during a pandemic and how emergency powers
can best be ended once it wanes. Written by an expert on
constitutional law and human rights, this accessible book will
shape how governments, opposition, courts and society as a whole
view future pandemic emergency powers.
Primitive Photography considers the hand-made photographic process
in its entirety, showing the reader how to make box-cameras,
lenses, paper negatives and salt prints, using inexpensive tools
and materials found in most hardware and art-supply stores.
Step-by-step procedures are presented alongside theoretical
explanations and historical background. Streamlined calotype
procedures are demonstrated, featuring different paper negative
processes and overlooked, developing-out printing methods.
Primitive Photography combines the simplicity of pinhole
photography, the handmade quality of alternative processes, and the
precision of large-format. For those seeking alternatives to
commercially prepared material as well as digital photography, it
provides the instructions for creating the entire photographic
process from the ground up. Given its scope and treatment of the
photographic process as a whole, this may be the first book of its
kind to appear in over a century.
Permanent States of Emergency and the Rule of Law explores the
impact that oxymoronic 'permanent' states of emergency have on the
validity and effectiveness of constitutional norms and, ultimately,
constituent power. It challenges the idea that many constitutional
orders are facing permanent states of emergency due to the
'objective nature' of threats facing modern states today, arguing
instead that the nature of a threat depends upon the subjective
assessment of the decision-maker. In light of this, it further
argues that robust judicial scrutiny and review of these decisions
is required to ensure that the temporariness of the emergency is a
legal question and that the validity of constitutional norms is not
undermined by their perpetual suspension. It does this by way of a
narrower conception of the rule of law than standard accounts in
favour of judicial review of emergency powers in the literature,
which tend to be based on the normative value of human rights. In
so doing it seeks to refute the fundamental constitutional
challenge posed by Carl Schmitt: that all state power cannot be
constrained by law.
This book is intended as a reference manual that will provide the
busy clinician with up-to-date information on the diagnosis and
treatment of uncommon and rare gynecological cancers. While
standard textbooks briefly cover these tumors, this is intended as
a more comprehensive yet easy-to-use guide. After opening chapters
on epidemiology, pathology, and diagnostic imaging, the full range
of infrequently encountered gynecological cancers (ovarian,
uterine, cervical, vaginal, and vulval) is presented and discussed
with the aid of high-quality illustrations. In each case, detailed
attention is paid to both differential diagnosis and current
treatment options. The book has been written by an international
panel of experts and is the first to gather all the uncommon and
rare gynecological cancers together within one volume.
This book is intended as a reference manual that will provide the
busy clinician with up-to-date information on the diagnosis and
treatment of uncommon and rare gynecological cancers. While
standard textbooks briefly cover these tumors, this is intended as
a more comprehensive yet easy-to-use guide. After opening chapters
on epidemiology, pathology, and diagnostic imaging, the full range
of infrequently encountered gynecological cancers (ovarian,
uterine, cervical, vaginal, and vulval) is presented and discussed
with the aid of high-quality illustrations. In each case, detailed
attention is paid to both differential diagnosis and current
treatment options. The book has been written by an international
panel of experts and is the first to gather all the uncommon and
rare gynecological cancers together within one volume.
Primitive Photography considers the hand-made photographic process
in its entirety, showing the reader how to make box-cameras,
lenses, paper negatives and salt prints, using inexpensive tools
and materials found in most hardware and art-supply stores.
Step-by-step procedures are presented alongside theoretical
explanations and historical background. Streamlined calotype
procedures are demonstrated, featuring different paper negative
processes and overlooked, developing-out printing methods.
Primitive Photography combines the simplicity of pinhole
photography, the handmade quality of alternative processes, and the
precision of large-format. For those seeking alternatives to
commercially prepared material as well as digital photography, it
provides the instructions for creating the entire photographic
process from the ground up. Given its scope and treatment of the
photographic process as a whole, this may be the first book of its
kind to appear in over a century.
Step-by-step directions for building cameras and lenses
Highly illustrated with over 135 black and white color
illustrations
Includes suggested reading lists, sources for supplies, and safety
tips
A vast and previously undisclosed underground economy exists in the
United States. The products bought and sold: animals. In "Animal
Underworld," veteran investigative journalist Alan Green exposes
the sleazy, sometimes illegal web of those who trade in rare and
exotic creatures. Green and The Center for Public Integrity reveal
which American zoos and amusement parks dump their "surplus"
animals on the middlemen adept at secretly redirecting them into
the private pet trade. We're taken to exotic-animal auctions, where
the anonymous high bidders are often notorious dealers,
hunting-ranch proprietors, and profit-minded charlatans
masquerading as conservationists. We visit some of the nation's
most prestigious universities and research laboratories, whose
diseased monkeys are "laundered" through this same network of
breeders and dealers until they finally reach the homes of
unsuspecting pet owners. And we meet the men and women who make
their living by skirting through loopholes in the law, or by
ignoring the law altogether. For anyone who cares about animals;
for pet owners, zoo-goers, wildlife conservationists, and animal
welfare advocates, "Animal Underworld" is gripping, shocking
reading.
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Death in the Hills
Charles Alan Green
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R741
Discovery Miles 7 410
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Permanent States of Emergency and the Rule of Law explores the
impact that oxymoronic 'permanent' states of emergency have on the
validity and effectiveness of constitutional norms and, ultimately,
constituent power. It challenges the idea that many constitutional
orders are facing permanent states of emergency due to the
'objective nature' of threats facing modern states today, arguing
instead that the nature of a threat depends upon the subjective
assessment of the decision-maker. In light of this, it further
argues that robust judicial scrutiny and review of these decisions
is required to ensure that the temporariness of the emergency is a
legal question and that the validity of constitutional norms is not
undermined by their perpetual suspension. It does this by way of a
narrower conception of the rule of law than standard accounts in
favour of judicial review of emergency powers in the literature,
which tend to be based on the normative value of human rights. In
so doing it seeks to refute the fundamental constitutional
challenge posed by Carl Schmitt: that all state power cannot be
constrained by law.
Until recently, the South Caucasus was a virtual /terra/
/incognita/ on Western archaeological maps of southwest Asia. The
conspicuous absence of marked places, of site names, toponyms, and
topography gave the impression of a region distant, unknown, and
vacant. The Joint American-Armenian Project for the Archaeology and
Geography of Ancient Transcaucasian Societies (Project ArAGATS) was
founded in 1998 to explore this terrain. Our investigations were
guided by two overarching goals: to illuminate the social and
political transformations central to the regions unique
(pre)history and to explore the broader intellectual implications
of collaboration between the rich archaeological traditions of
Armenia (former U.S.S.R.) and the United States. This volume
provides the first encompassing report on the ongoing studies of
Project ArAGATS, detailing the general context of contemporary
archaeological research in the South Caucasus as well as the
specific context of our regional investigations in the Tsaghkahovit
Plain of central Armenia. The book opens with detailed examinations
of the history of archaeology in the South Caucasus, the
theoretical problems that currently orient archaeological research,
and a comprehensive reevaluation of the material bases for regional
chronology and periodization. The work then provides the complete
results of our regional investigations in the Tsaghkahovit Plain,
including the findings of the first systematic pedestrian survey
ever conducted in the Caucasus. Thanks to the results presented in
this volume, and Project ArAGATSs ongoing excavations in the area,
the Tsaghkahovit Plain is today the best known archaeological
region in the South Caucasus. The present volume thus provides
archaeologists with both an orientation to the prehistory of the
South Caucasus and the complete findings of the first phase of
Project ArAGATSs field investigations.
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