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Once an enemy of the apartheid police, Andrew Brown has worked as a police reservist for almost twenty years. In this book he takes the reader on patrol with him – into the ganglands of the Cape Flats, the townships of Masiphumelele and Nyanga, and the high-walled Southern Suburbs.
Good Cop, Bad Cop is a personal account of the perilous and often conflicting work of a SAPS officer. Brown describes being shot at, arresting suspects in a drug bust, chasing down leads in a homicide investigation and keeping the peace during the UCT student protests. Brown illustrates how difficult the job of the police is, and how easy it is to react with undue force. Yet he argues passionately that the role of the police is to be a service to communities and not a force to suppress social discontent.
Gripping and thought-provoking, this is a fascinating insight into the social fabric of current South Africa.
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Around the World in Eighty Days
Jules Verne; Translated by Andrew Brown; Illustrated by Ross Collins
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R250
R200
Discovery Miles 2 000
Save R50 (20%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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Having learnt that a new railway in India has made it theoretically
possible to travel all the way around the globe in no more than
eighty days, Phileas Fogg, a wealthy and fastidious London
gentleman, makes a wager of £20,000 with his Reform Club
associates that he can achieve this hitherto unheard-of feat, and,
accompanied by his French valet Jean Passepartout, boards a train
for Dover the very same evening. Pursued on their epic journey by a
Scotland Yard policeman who has mistaken Fogg for a bank robber,
the intrepid voyagers face a race against time as they traverse a
range of exotic and sometimes hazardous landscapes and make use of
any and every mode of transport available to them – including
elephants – in order to achieve their goal. A huge commercial
success on first publication in 1872, Jules Verne’s classic
adventure story has been adapted numerous times for the stage and
the screen, as well as inspiring many real-life adventurers who
have sought to emulate Fogg’s audacious odyssey. Now presented in
a brand-new translation.
Thing a Week 2010 is a short story and poetry anthology that
resulted from an ambitious project in 2010 to write, edit, and
polish a short story every single week for a year. Stories include
some hard and soft science fiction, fantasy settings, modern
interpersonal drama, and many other thrilling settings and plots in
the form of 52 short stories spanning one to twenty pages each.
This edited collection approaches the field of social robotics from
the perspective of a cultural ecology, fostering a deeper
examination of the reach of robotic technology into the lived
experience of diverse human populations, as well as the impact of
human cultures on the development and design of these social
agents. To address the broad topic of Cultural Robotics, the book
is sectioned into three focus areas: Human Futures, Assistive
Technologies, and Creative Platforms and their Communities. The
Human Futures section includes chapters on the histories and future
of social robot morphology design, sensory and sonic interaction
with robots, technology ethics, material explorations of
embodiment, and robotic performed sentience. The Assistive
Technologies section presents chapters from community-led teams,
and researchers working to adopt a strengths-based approach to
designing assistive technologies for those with disability
or neurodivergence. Importantly, this section contains work
written by authors belonging to those communities. Creative
Platforms and their Communities looks to the creative
cross-disciplinary researchers adopting robotics within their art
practices, those contributing creatively to more traditional
robotics research, and the testing of robotics in non-traditional
platforms such as museum and gallery spaces. Cultural Robotics:
Social Robots and their Emergent Cultural Ecologies makes a case
for the development of social robotics to be increasingly informed
by community-led transdisciplinary research, to be decentralised
and democratised, shaped by teams with a diversity of backgrounds,
informed by both experts and non-experts, and tested in both
traditional and non-traditional platforms. In this way, the field
of cultural robotics as an ecological approach to encompassing the
widest possible spectrum of human experience in the development of
social robotics can be advanced. Â Â
This collection gives broad and up-to-date results in the research
and development of materials characterization and processing.
Coverage is well-rounded from minerals, metals, and materials
characterization and developments in extraction to the fabrication
and performance of materials. In addition, topics as varied as
structural steels to electronic materials to plant-based composites
are explored. The latest research presented in this wide area make
this book both timely and relevant to the materials science field
as a whole. The book explores scientific processes to characterize
materials using modern technologies, and focuses on the
interrelationships and interdependence among processing, structure,
properties, and performance of materials. Topics covered include
ferrous materials, non-ferrous materials, minerals, ceramics,
clays, soft materials, method development, processing, corrosion,
welding, solidification, composites, extraction, powders,
nanomaterials, advanced materials, and several others.
European economic and monetary union continues to be the subject of
intense controversy, and the launch of a single currency in January
1999 served to concentrate this debate around one issue: is the
euro in the interests of Europe? This pertinent book attempts to
address this contentious question. The authors offer a sustained
argument that the single currency as currently implemented does not
promise to deliver prolonged growth. They contend that the economic
impact of the euro, and its accompanying institutions, is likely to
be destabilising and deflationary; that the political impact is
profoundly undemocratic and that the social consequences are likely
to be deleterious. They do not reject the concept of a single
currency but are highly critical of policy arrangements such as the
Stability and Growth Pact which govern the euro. The authors
propose alternative policy and institutional arrangements within
which the euro should be embedded. They demonstrate that these
would have the benefits of a single currency whilst avoiding many
of the potential costs identified by detractors. EMU will continue
to cause huge changes in the social and economic sphere of Europe.
This book does not attempt to polarise the debate by simply
advocating for or against the euro, but instead puts the situation
into context, identifies potential problems and proposes possible
remedies. It will be required reading for economists, political
scientists, politicians and policymakers.
With a population of nearly 1.5 billion and the world’s second
largest economy, China is a major player in the world today, and
yet many in the West know very little about contemporary China.
This book provides a clear, authoritative and up-to-date history of
China since 1949, drawing on extensive research to describe and
explain the key developments and to dispel the many myths and
misconceptions surrounding this twenty-first-century superpower. In
contrast to many commentators who overstate the novelty of the
Communist regime, Guiheux emphasizes instead its complex political
heritage, highlighting the many continuities it shares with the
reformers and revolutionaries of the early twentieth century. At
the same time, the ability of China’s authoritarian regime to
transform the economy and society is key to understanding its
breakneck trajectory of modernization – an ability that, as
Guiheux explains, far outweighed the importance and effectiveness
of Mao’s utopian vision. Guiheux also aims to ‘de-exoticize’
China. While not on the path of a Western-style modernity, China
has experienced the same phenomena that have characterized every
historical process of modernization: industrialization,
urbanization, bureaucratization and globalization. This expertly
researched history of the People’s Republic of China will be
essential reading for all students and scholars of Chinese history
and politics, and for anyone interested in contemporary China.
That the works of the ancient tragedians still have an immediate
and profound appeal surely needs no demonstration, yet the modern
reader continually stumbles across concepts which are difficult to
interpret or relate to - moral pollution, the authority of oracles,
classical ideas of geography - as well as the names of unfamiliar
legendary and mythological figures. A New Companion to Greek
Tragedy provides a useful reference tool for the 'Greekless'
reader: arranged on a strictly encyclopaedic pattern, with headings
for all proper names occurring in the twelve most frequently read
tragedies, it contains brief but adequately detailed essays on
moral, religious and philosophical terms, as well as mythical
genealogies where important. There are in addition entries on Greek
theatre, technical terms and on other writers from Aristotle to
Freud, whilst the essay by P. E. Easterling traces some connections
between the ideas found in the tragedians and earlier Greek
thought.
Pierre Bourdieu and Abdelmalek Sayad met in their twenties in the
midst of the Algerian War of Independence. From their first
meeting, a strong intellectual friendship was born between the
French philosopher and the activist from the colony, nourished by
the same desire to understand the world in order to change it.
 The work of both men was driven by the necessity of putting
knowledge to use, whether by unveiling the relations of domination
that structured life in Algeria or by opening emancipatory
perspectives for the Algerian people. Colonies were of course a
customary site of ethnographic work, but Bourdieu and Sayad refused
to sacrifice scientific rigour to political expediency, even as
Algeria descended deeper into war. Indeed, the act of understanding
as a political commitment to the transformation of society lay at
the heart of their project. Â In this remarkable book,
drawing on the public and private archives of these brilliant
thinkers and interviews with their contemporaries, AmÃn Pérez
rediscovers the anticolonial origins of their pathbreaking social
thought. Bourdieu and Sayad, he argues, forged another way of doing
politics, laying the foundations of a revolutionary pedagogy, not
just for anticolonial liberation but for true social
emancipation.Â
This bestselling text enables beginning researchers to organise and
evaluate the research they read, and to plan and implement small
scale research projects of their own. It gives structured,
practical guidance on: the development of a research question
techniques of data collection qualitative and quantitative forms of
analysis the writing and dissemination of research. The authors
present research as a principled activity that begins with the
establishing and structuring of theoretical and empirical fields
and research findings as serving to ask questions of educational
practice rather than directing it. This revised and updated second
edition includes a new chapter dealing with the complex issue of
research ethics. It also includes consideration of digital
technologies and new media, both as settings of research and
research tools, the chapters on qualitative and quantitative
analysis have been expanded and the annotated bibliography updated.
The authors have been active researchers in educational studies for
more than twenty years. They have also supervised numerous doctoral
and masters dissertations and taught research methods programmes in
various higher education institutions around the world as well as
in the Institute of Education, University of London.
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Uncertain Times
Jacques Ranciere; Translated by Andrew Brown
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R485
Discovery Miles 4 850
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The global triumph of democracy was announced thirty years ago,
promising an age of consensus in which the dispassionate
consideration of objective problems would give birth to a world at
peace. Today, these grand hopes have been destroyed, and the era
touted as new and exceptional has turned out to be remarkably
similar to the old order – but not simply due to the aggression
of external forces. Instead, we must look to the nature of
consensus itself, which, in the view of leading radical philosopher
Jacques Rancière, is revealed as a violent, absolutized capitalist
machine whose output is ever more inequality, exclusion and hate.
This book delivers a frank and piercing assessment of the
globalised capitalist consensus. The invasion of Iraq, the riots on
Capitol Hill and the rise of the European far right all provide
evidence of the consummation of consensual realism, as does the
current state-sanctioned racism which exploits the disenchanted
progressive tradition and is led by an intelligentsia that claims
to be left-wing. At the same time, Rancière also praises the
dynamism of social movements which affirm the power of the assembly
of equals and its capacity for worldmaking: autonomous protest
collectives have proven themselves capable of opening breaches in
the consensual order and challenging the post-1989 system of
domination.
A real revolution is taking place in the way in which we
conceptualize and practice education and learning. This book sets
out to explore the immense impact that digital technology is having
on education around the world and the ways in which it is used by a
wide range of individuals and communities.
Cultural changes taking place range from the blurring of boundaries
between formal and informal learning to the development of new
"virtual communities" that revolve around particular social or
cultural interests, and which serve as a crucial tool and source of
identity for spatially displaced communities such as refugees.
Contributors analyze changes in technology such as e-mail, the
Internet, digital video, and other media, but also the effect of
this new technology on the way people live and learn around the
world.
Digital technology is changing the way we all live, and this book
is an authoritative study of these changes in all their diversity.
This book offers a fresh interpretation of the relationship between the church, society and religion across five centuries of change. Andrew Brown examines how the teachings of an increasingly universal Church were applied at a local level and how social change shaped the religious practices of the laity. His approach encompasses the structures of corporate religion, the devotional practices surrounding cults and saints, the effects of literacy (not least on the development of heresy), and how gender, class and political power affected and fragmented the expression of religion.
This book examines the relationship between critical realism and Marxism. The authors argue that critical realism and Marxism have much to gain from each other. This is the first book to address the controversial debates between critical realism and Marxism, and it does so from a wide range if disciplines. The authors argue that whilst one book cannot answer all the questions about the relationship between critical realism and Marxism, this book does provide some significant answers. In doing so, Critical Realism and Marxism reveals a potentially fruitful relationship; deepens our understanding of the social world and makes an important contribution towards eliminating the barbarism that accompanies contemporary capitalism.
This is a collection of documents on English history. Editorial
comment is directed towards making sources intelligible rather than
drawing conclusions from them. Full account has been taken of
modern textual criticism. A general introduction to each volume
portrays the character of the period under review and critical
bibliographies have been added to assist further investigation.
Documents collected include treaties, personal letters, statutes,
military dispatches, diaries, declarations, newspaper articles,
government and cabinet proceedings, orders, acts, sermons,
pamphlets, agricultural instructions, charters, grants, guild
regulations and voting records. Volumes include genealogical
tables, lists of officials, chronologies, diagrams, graphs and
maps.
We are experiencing an anthropological revolution. We see it
in the #MeToo movement, in the denunciation of femicide and in an
increasingly vociferous critique of patriarchal
domination. Why this sudden rise of an antagonistic
conception of the relationship between men and women, at the very
moment when progress is accelerating and when the goals of first-
and second-wave feminism seem on the verge of being
achieved? In this book, the anthropologist and historian
Emmanuel Todd, while not underestimating the importance of crucial
inequalities that remain, argues that the emancipation of women has
essentially already taken place but that it has given rise to new
tensions and contradictions. As women gain more freedom, they also
gain access to traditional male social pathologies: economic
anxiety, the disorientation of anomie, and individual and class
resentment. But because they remain women, with the ability to bear
children, their burden as human beings, although richer, is now
more difficult to bear than that of men. In order to
understand our current condition, Todd retraces the evolution of
the male/female relationship through the long history of the human
species, from the emergence of Homo sapiens a hundred thousand
years ago to the present. He also conducts a broad empirical study
of the convergence between men and women today and of the
differences that still separate them – in education, in
employment and in relation to longevity, suicide and homicide,
electoral behaviour and racism. He explores the relations between
women’s liberation and other changes in contemporary societies
such as the collapse of religion, the decline of industry, the
decline of homophobia, the rise of bisexuality and the transgender
phenomenon, and the decline in a sense of the collective life. And
he shows how and why Western countries – and especially the
Anglo-American world, Scandinavia and France – are, in their new
feminist revolution, perhaps less universal than they think.
From the forests of Yellowstone to the steppes of the Haut-Var, the
French philosopher and environmentalist Baptiste Morizot invites us
to develop a different relationship to nature: to become detectives
of nature and to follow the footprints of the many wonderful and
extraordinary animals with which we share the Earth. By deciphering
and interpreting an animal's footprints and other signs, we
gradually discover not only which animal it is, but the animal's
motives too. Through this kind of 'philosophical tracking', we come
to see the world from the animal's point of view, to learn to live
in this world from the perspective of another species. We begin to
let go of our anthropocentric point of view and to recapture the
kind of perspective that our ancestors once had when they had no
choice but to adopt an animal point of view if they wanted to
survive. In short, by following animal trails, we learn how to pay
increased attention to the living world around us and how to
cohabit this world with others, thereby enriching our understanding
of other species, of the world we share with them and of ourselves.
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Danielle Steel
Paperback
R385
R275
Discovery Miles 2 750
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