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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.
Born into a blue-collar family in the Jim Crow South, Herman J.
Russell built a shoeshine business when he was twelve years
old—and used the profits to buy a vacant lot where he built a
duplex while he was still a teen. Over the next fifty years, he
continued to build businesses, amassing one of the nation’s most
profitable minority-owned conglomerates. In Building Atlanta,
Russell shares his inspiring life story and reveals how he overcame
racism, poverty, and a debilitating speech impediment to become one
of the most successful African American entrepreneurs, Atlanta
civic leaders, and unsung heroes of the civil rights movement. Not
just a typical rags-to-riches story, Russell achieved his success
through focus, planning, and humility, and he shares his winning
advice throughout. As a millionaire builder before the civil rights
movement took hold and a friend of Dr. King, Ralph Abernathy, and
Andrew Young, he quietly helped finance the civil rights crusade,
putting up bond for protestors and providing the funds that kept
King’s dream alive. He provides a wonderful behind-the-scenes
look at the role the business community, both black and white
working together, played in Atlanta’s peaceful progression from
the capital of the racially divided Old South to the financial
center of the New South.
The Judean monarch Hezekiah remains one of the most significant
figures in biblical studies. For all of his greatness, however,
there is little about him that may be stated with certainty. This
study provides a detailed reexamination of this enterprising ruler.
It commences with data outside the biblical text from Assyrian
records and ancient Near Eastern archaeology which may be brought
to bear in reconstructing the historical Hezekiah, and subsequently
proceeds to augment this picture based on his portrayal in the
books of Kings, First Isaiah, and Chronicles. Its focus is on those
issues that either remain contentious in biblical scholarship, or
else have been resolved into a general consensus that needs to be
called into question.
Deciphers amylin's physiology and reveals previously unrecognized
mechanisms fundamental to control body weight and fuel homeostasis.
Also discusses therapeutic utility of amylin as the first new
medicine to treat diabetes since insulin.
*Provides a current comprehensive treatment of amylin the
hormone
*Identifies the majority of amylin's physiologic functions
Crisis Negotiations: Managing Critical Incidents and Hostage
Situations in Law Enforcement and Corrections, the sixth edition,
is an invaluable resource for mitigating, managing, or responding
to high risk negotiation incidents. This revision includes the
current research on negotiating high-risk incidents in the
classroom and the field. It includes an applied analysis of the
value of psychopathology to high-risk perpetrators. It refines the
"empirical eclecticism" introduced in the fourth edition to provide
a conceptual basis for crisis negotiations. The authors include
summary bullet points at the end of each chapter for easy reference
when negotiators are in the field and a review of the literature
since the last edition appeared. Their discussion of the strategic
planning process involved in high-risk negotiation incidents
focuses clearly on the critical questions negotiators need to ask
themselves about any high-risk incident and provides a practical
approach to the psychology of individuals that engage in high-risk
incidents. Known as "the bible" to experienced professionals in the
field, this sixth edition of Crisis Negotiations is vital for
practitioners as well as for criminology, criminal justice or
psychology courses in crisis management, applied psychology, and
special operations in law enforcement and corrections. Instructors
will find it well supported by ancillary materials including
discussion questions, slide presentations, and a test bank, as well
as case studies and self-assessment quizzes for students, making it
easy to develop a first-time course or to integrate it into an
existing course.
Crisis Negotiations: Managing Critical Incidents and Hostage
Situations in Law Enforcement and Corrections, the sixth edition,
is an invaluable resource for mitigating, managing, or responding
to high risk negotiation incidents. This revision includes the
current research on negotiating high-risk incidents in the
classroom and the field. It includes an applied analysis of the
value of psychopathology to high-risk perpetrators. It refines the
"empirical eclecticism" introduced in the fourth edition to provide
a conceptual basis for crisis negotiations. The authors include
summary bullet points at the end of each chapter for easy reference
when negotiators are in the field and a review of the literature
since the last edition appeared. Their discussion of the strategic
planning process involved in high-risk negotiation incidents
focuses clearly on the critical questions negotiators need to ask
themselves about any high-risk incident and provides a practical
approach to the psychology of individuals that engage in high-risk
incidents. Known as "the bible" to experienced professionals in the
field, this sixth edition of Crisis Negotiations is vital for
practitioners as well as for criminology, criminal justice or
psychology courses in crisis management, applied psychology, and
special operations in law enforcement and corrections. Instructors
will find it well supported by ancillary materials including
discussion questions, slide presentations, and a test bank, as well
as case studies and self-assessment quizzes for students, making it
easy to develop a first-time course or to integrate it into an
existing course.
Basketball demands a level of leadership that can consistently
create teams with both personal responsibility and the autonomy to
make split-second decisions in incredibly high-stakes situations.
Does this sound familiar? Well it should this is the current
environment for corporate, political, nonprofit, and educational
leadership! In LEADING HIGH PERFORMERS, Snow develops his
experience on the court into a formula to help corporate and
organizational leaders understand how to get their high performers,
MVP's, and top new recruits to perform better and follow their
leadership. Because like basketball players today's organization
leaders must be "fast, fluid, and flexible" to be successful, these
new times, demand new leaders. Throughout the book, Snow examines
the most crucial aspects of leadership development, including: The
secrets of self-confidence The keys to powerful communication Tips
for managing conflict And... Methods of obtaining peak performance
from yourself and those around you Snow also frequently breaks away
from his own lessons to bring readers the thoughts on leadership of
some of the high-profile coaches and teammates throughout his
college and pro careers, including Larry Brown, LeBron James, Tom
Izzo, Allen Iverson, Nate McMillan and Jud Heathcote. Snow
understands what it is like to be the new guy on the team, thrust
into leadership the first day on the job and charged with leading
legends of the game. It's not as simple as pointing in the right
direction and expecting everyone to follow with a high-five and no
ulterior motives. High performers have high expectations, high
skill levels and high egos that must be catered to rather than
ignored. It can be a job within a job leading these rock stars to
winning results and woe to those who are unprepared.
From her unique vantage point in New Orleans, Sybil Haydel
Morial’s life spans one of the most critical periods in our
country’s history. In this remarkable memoir, Morial chronicles
her life as both witness to and catalyst for sweeping
changes—desegregation, the end of Jim Crow, and the fight for
voting rights. These changes transformed the nation during her
lifetime. Morial’s story is welcome inspiration for the struggle
for political empowerment that continues. As Ambassador Andrew
Young, a childhood friend and later Sybil’s prom date, relates in
his foreword: “It is doubtful that New Orleans could have
produced two mayors with the dynamic, creative, and visionary
leadership of 'Dutch' and Marc Morial without a wife and mother of
Sybil’s loving strength, intelligence, and moral courage. But the
life she lived in the crucible times and her perception of the
civil rights movement in New Orleans goes far beyond that.â€
This volume presents the results of archaeological survey and
excavation at Eckweek, Somerset, which yielded one of the most
important medieval rural settlement sequences yet excavated from
south-west England. At the centre of the narrative is a succession
of well-preserved buildings spanning the late 10th to the 14th
centuries A.D. forming the nucleus of a Domesday manor and its Late
Saxon precursor. Detailed analysis of the structural sequence
offers a new regional perspective on pre-Conquest earthfast timber
architecture and its subsequent (12th-century) replacement by
masonry traditions. Culminating in a richly preserved 14th-century
farmhouse, including a very complete assemblage of structural and
domestic objects, the structural archaeology provides an unusually
refined picture of the internal organisation of later medieval
domestic space within a rural farming setting. Detailed analytical
attention is given to the abundant artefactual and environmental
datasets recovered from the excavations (including prolific
assemblages of medieval pottery and palaeonvironmental data) with a
nuanced appraisal of their interpretative implications. Anyone with
an interest in the dynamics and regional complexity of medieval
rural communities will find this a stimulating and enlightening
read.
This volume presents the results of archaeological survey and
excavation at Eckweek, Somerset, which yielded one of the most
important medieval rural settlement sequences yet excavated from
south-west England. At the centre of the narrative is a succession
of well-preserved buildings spanning the late 10th to the 14th
centuries A.D. forming the nucleus of a Domesday manor and its Late
Saxon precursor. Detailed analysis of the structural sequence
offers a new regional perspective on pre-Conquest earthfast timber
architecture and its subsequent (12th-century) replacement by
masonry traditions. Culminating in a richly preserved 14th-century
farmhouse, including a very complete assemblage of structural and
domestic objects, the structural archaeology provides an unusually
refined picture of the internal organisation of later medieval
domestic space within a rural farming setting. Detailed analytical
attention is given to the abundant artefactual and environmental
datasets recovered from the excavations (including prolific
assemblages of medieval pottery and palaeonvironmental data) with a
nuanced appraisal of their interpretative implications. Anyone with
an interest in the dynamics and regional complexity of medieval
rural communities will find this a stimulating and enlightening
read.
By 2050, the global population of humans is predicted to
increase by 35%. Approximately 70% more food may be required, and
this will take place against a backdrop of 15-40% land degradation.
This book examines land use intensification and biodiversity
conservation and its impacts. It also discusses whether suites of
species, and/or functional groups of taxa will either benefit or
suffer from land use intensification and whether it is possible to
make robust predictions of biotic responses across landscapes,
regions, and continents.
The only female in Martin Luther King, Jr.'s inner circle of
leadership, for the first time, offers her account of the Civil
Rights Movement and what it means to us now.
Dorothy Cotton, recently honored with a Freedom Award from the
National Civil Rights Museum, is the former director for the
Southern Christian Leader Conference's Citizens Education Project.
Ms. Cotton was at the front lines in the fight for civil rights. In
"If Your Back's Not Bent" she shares an up-close and personal
account of those turbulent times, as no one else can.
Born into poverty in North Carolina, she survived deprivation
and racism by seeking solace in books and spirituality, worked her
way through college, earned a master's degree, and married. But
something was missing. She found it through her work with the
Movement and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., then a charismatic young
preacher. She became a member the his Executive Committee for the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, training and organizing
men and women across the South to participate in nonviolent
demonstrations, including the fateful 1963 Birmingham campaign.
After King's death, she continued her work as an activist, serving
as vice president of field operations for the King Center for
Nonviolent Change. Today she speaks around the world, from Africa
to China, and has appeared on "The Oprah Winfrey Show," the BBC,
PBS' "American Experience," and many more. "If Your Back's Not
Bent" is the first published account of how her work and the CEP
were fundamental to the success of the Civil Rights Movement.
Recent years have witnessed considerable speculation about the
potential of open data to bring about wide-scale transformation.
The bulk of existing evidence about the impact of open data,
however, focuses on high-income countries. Much less is known about
open data’s role and value in low- and middle-income countries, and
more generally about its possible contributions to economic and
social development. Open Data for Developing Economies features
in-depth case studies on how open data is having an impact across
the developing world-from an agriculture initiative in Colombia to
data-driven healthcare projects in Uganda and South Africa to
crisis response in Nepal. The analysis built on these case studies
aims to create actionable intelligence regarding: (a) the
conditions under which open data is most (and least) effective in
development, presented in the form of a Periodic Table of Open
Data; (b) strategies to maximize the positive contributions of open
data to development; and (c) the means for limiting open data’s
harms on developing countries.
First selection of Andrew Young's best-known short poems and the
long mystical poem Into Hades. The volume is illustrated by Joan
Hassalal's powerful wood-engravings.
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