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Showing 1 - 8 of 8 matches in All Departments

Butterfly Wings - A Hopeful Story About Climate Anxiety (Hardcover): Samuel Larochelle Butterfly Wings - A Hopeful Story About Climate Anxiety (Hardcover)
Samuel Larochelle; Illustrated by Eve Patenaude; Translated by Arielle Aaronson
R405 Discovery Miles 4 050 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

An honest exploration of climate anxiety, for kids 8+ and the adults who love them. When ten-year-old Florent overhears his mothers discussing the possibility of having another baby—and expressing their reluctance due to fears about the planet—his mind races off into a spiral of fear and guilt. Is the planet suffering because there are too many children—children like him? Do his parents think they made a mistake by bringing him into the world? One night, Florent dreams that the forests have all burned to the ground and that his parents are flying away on a spaceship, abandoning him on a ruined planet. When he wakes up, he decides to stop talking… until a discussion with his mothers changes everything. At a time when climate change is negatively impacting kids' mental health, Butterfly Wings provides: Anxiety relief: provides a safe space for kids to process their anxiety, fear, and other emotions about the climate A social-emotional learning tool for parents and teachers to talk about climate change with kids through a gentle and hopeful lens Through thoughtful words and gorgeous illustrations, this compassionate story confronts the very real challenge of climate anxiety in a way that is accessible to young readers. Butterfly Wings provides children with a way to understand their feelings, while also offering hope for a different future.

Some Maintenance Required (Paperback): marie-Renee Lavoie Some Maintenance Required (Paperback)
marie-Renee Lavoie; Translated by Arielle Aaronson
R444 R372 Discovery Miles 3 720 Save R72 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Bestselling author of Autopsy of a Boring Wife Marie-Renee Lavoie is a master of making us fall in love with her characters. She does it again with the tender coming-of-age story Some Maintenance Required. It is 1993, the last year of school and Laurie's final spring before adulthood. She works part time at a restaurant and looks after Cindy, her neglected, potty-mouthed little neighbour. Like her mother, Laurie devours books and dreams big. Her father works at a garage, where Laurie constantly struggles to keep her car running. It is here that a budding romance intensifies Laurie's understanding of class differences, and opens her eyes to a more complicated world. With her big heart, she takes Cindy globe-trotting without even leaving town, and learns how to come to terms with circumstances beyond her control. Life teaches Laurie that everyone requires some maintenance sometimes. A story of taking responsibility and coming into adulthood, Some Maintenance Required is as funny and as impressive as its main character.

Alone - The Journeys of Three Young Refugees (Hardcover): Paul Tom Alone - The Journeys of Three Young Refugees (Hardcover)
Paul Tom; Illustrated by Melanie Baillairge; Translated by Arielle Aaronson
R529 R440 Discovery Miles 4 400 Save R89 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Trade Imbalance - The Struggle to Weigh Human Rights Concerns in Trade Policymaking (Hardcover): Susan Ariel Aaronson, Jamie M.... Trade Imbalance - The Struggle to Weigh Human Rights Concerns in Trade Policymaking (Hardcover)
Susan Ariel Aaronson, Jamie M. Zimmerman
R2,861 R2,476 Discovery Miles 24 760 Save R385 (13%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In many countries, citizens allege that trade policies undermine specific rights such as labor rights, the right to health, or the right to political participation. However, in some countries, policy makers use trade policies to promote human rights. Although scholars, policy makers, and activists have long debated this relationship, in truth we know very little about it. This book enters this murky territory with three goals. First, it aims to provide readers with greater insights into the relationship between human rights and trade. Second, it includes the first study of how South Africa, Brazil, the United States, and the European Union coordinate trade and human rights objectives and resolve conflicts. It also looks at how human rights issues are seeping into the WTO. Finally, it provides suggestions to policy makers for making their trade and human rights policies more coherent.

Trade Imbalance - The Struggle to Weigh Human Rights Concerns in Trade Policymaking (Paperback): Susan Ariel Aaronson, Jamie M.... Trade Imbalance - The Struggle to Weigh Human Rights Concerns in Trade Policymaking (Paperback)
Susan Ariel Aaronson, Jamie M. Zimmerman
R1,169 Discovery Miles 11 690 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In many countries, citizens allege that trade policies undermine specific rights such as labor rights, the right to health, or the right to political participation. However, in some countries, policy makers use trade policies to promote human rights. Although scholars, policy makers, and activists have long debated this relationship, in truth we know very little about it. This book enters this murky territory with three goals. First, it aims to provide readers with greater insights into the relationship between human rights and trade. Second, it includes the first study of how South Africa, Brazil, the United States, and the European Union coordinate trade and human rights objectives and resolve conflicts. It also looks at how human rights issues are seeping into the WTO. Finally, it provides suggestions to policy makers for making their trade and human rights policies more coherent.

How Jack Lost Time (Hardcover): Stephanie Lapointe How Jack Lost Time (Hardcover)
Stephanie Lapointe; Illustrated by Delphie Cote-LaCroix; Translated by Arielle Aaronson
R405 Discovery Miles 4 050 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

An artful and timeless exploration of love, loss, grief, and family, How Jack Lost Time will appeal to readers of Charlie Mackesy's The Boy, The Mole, The Fox and The Horse, and other picture books for older readers and adults. Jack is not like other sea captains. Fishermen say he's weird, but Jack only cares about one thing: the grey whale with the scarred dorsal fin, the one who swallowed up his son, Julos, years before. Jack promises he will not come home without Julos, even if it means losing himself in the process. Then, on a night like any other, Jack sees something lurking around his boat. He throws himself into the whale's dark mouth. But is he too late? Will his son recognize him after years of being alone? Poignant, original, and vibrant, this contemporary nautical fable journeys into the heart of the human spirit, and will move readers young and old. Winner of the 2019 Governor General's Award for Youth Literature-French Language

Screwed - How Women Are Set Up to Fail at Sex (Paperback): Lili Boisvert Screwed - How Women Are Set Up to Fail at Sex (Paperback)
Lili Boisvert; Translated by Arielle Aaronson
R354 Discovery Miles 3 540 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

When it comes to sex and desire, women are screwed. In film, on the page, in fashion, and in everyday life, women's desire is routinely shown as subordinate to men's - when it isn't suppressed altogether. Lili Boisvert argues that there is one dominant principle behind heterosexual encounters: that desire is a male phenomenon and women are merely its object. To change this alienating system, she contends, we must start by facing it head-on. From clothing to flirting, from our fascination with youth and innocence to the orgasm gap, every aspect of women's lives is dictated by their status as sex objects. Is it any wonder that they are feeling sexually unfulfilled? In a series of explorations of what desire looks like under patriarchy, Screwed sketches the contours of what could be true sexual liberation for women, inside - and outside - the bedroom.

Trade and the American Dream - A Social History of Postwar Trade Policy (Paperback): Susan Ariel Aaronson Trade and the American Dream - A Social History of Postwar Trade Policy (Paperback)
Susan Ariel Aaronson; Foreword by William V. Roth, Robert T. Matsui
R776 Discovery Miles 7 760 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Every hour of every day Americans see, smell, taste, or hear goods and services traded between the United States and other nations. Trade issues are front-page news but most Americans know little about the potential impact of global economic interdependence on their jobs, standard of living, and quality of life.

In Trade and the American Dream, Susan Aaronson highlights a previously ignored dimension of the United States trade policy: public understanding. Focusing on the debate over the three mechanisms designed to govern world trade -- the International Trade Organization (ITO), the General Agreement on Tarriffs and Trade (GATT), and the World Trade Organization (WTO) -- she examines how policymakers communicate and how the public comprehends trade policy.

Since 1947 the U.S. has led global efforts to free trade, and support for freer trade policies and for an international organization to govern world trade has become dogma among policymakers, business leaders, and economists. Relaying on archival research, polling data, public documents, interviews, and Congressional testimony, Aaronson shows that the public also matters in trade policy decisions. If concerns about the implications of economic interdependence remain unaddressed, American trade policy and an international trade organization are vulnerable to a surge of populism and isolationism.

While Americans became addicted to imported cars, radios, computers, and appliances, a growing number saw the costs of freer trade policies in the nation's slums, poverty statistics, crime rate, and unemployment figures. Concerns about freer trade policies reached a crescendo in the mid-1990s, especially as Congress debated U.S. participation in the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Aaronson suggests ways to create greater public understanding for the GATT/WTO and international trade. If national trade policy is to play in Peoria, Americans must first understand it.

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