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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.
Canada has a complex health delivery system which is a
conglomeration of 13 public plans--10 provincial and three
territorial as well as a number of federally administered plans
serving special populations such as Aboriginals and Veterans--all
providing full coverage for most hospital and physician services as
well as partial coverage for many services that vary among plans.
The importance of this study is that it examines how the
public/private sector relationship in health care
delivery--particularly that of the for-profit sector--has developed
both historically and in recent years, in three subnational
provincial jurisdictions within a federal system. The case study
provinces are Ontario, Quebec, and Alberta. The study examines both
similarities and differences in this development. These provinces
are highly distinct in their political culture and political
history affecting health care delivery. Ontario and Quebec are
Canada's most populous provinces and Alberta is an increasingly
populous prairie state. Alberta is unique in its long-time
governance of the Progressive Conservative party and its
predecessor the Social Credit Party. Ontario has had a more
variable political history with periods of Progressive
Conservative, New Democratic Party and Liberal leadership and in
recent years Quebec governance has shifted between the Parti Qu
becois and the Liberal Party. In this study, one dimension that the
authors examine are political dispositions to act regarding
public/private initiatives in health care delivery and how this
affects health care delivery in these provinces. Provincial medical
and hospital plans are constrained by the Canada Health Act of
1984. For necessary medical and hospital services, the provinces
and territories must adhere to the five principles of the Act in
order to receive federal funding. However for other extended health
care and health care-related services, there are federal
contributions that are not constrained by these
principles--although subject to reporting obligations. Another
factor providing some flexibility in provincial Medicare plans is
that necessary hospital and medical services are not enumerated in
the Canada Health Act. This has allowed some "delisting" of
services which is discussed in the case studies. In the provincial
case studies, the authors examine how the federal/provincial
dynamic in the delivery of health care services has worked out in
the three provinces, with respect to similarities and differences
regarding the involvement of the for-profit sector both within and
outside the respective Medicare systems. They also examine how the
fiscal setting has affected both political and economic
sustainability pressures with respect to inclusion of private
commercial initiatives in these three provincial settings. The
authors note that these initiatives occur both within and external
to Canadian provincial Medicare systems and that there is a need to
see that such initiatives are held publicly accountability to meet
equity and access goals. The study utilizes government documents,
press reports and personal interviews to draw a picture of health
delivery developments within the Canadian federal context. This
study adds to the comparative health policy literature by applying
a comparative approach to subnational provincial cases. It is also
noteworthy to note that globally, many nations' health insurance
plans incorporate a mixed public and private health delivery
system, albeit that the mixes of for-profit and not-for-profit
organizations will vary with respect to the ideological, political,
cultural and historical characteristics of various nations. This is
an important book for collections in Canadian studies, political
science, and public health.
The authorship of DEMOCRACY: AN AMERICAN NOVEL, published
anonymously in 1880, was not made public until after the death of
American historian HENRY BROOKS ADAMS (1838-1918), a member of the
Adams political family and a journalist dedicated to exposing
corruption. In this fictional tale with real-life relevance to late
19th-century politics, an election sometime in the 1870s has given
rise to a new president by the name of Jacob. Against this
backdrop, readers find New Yorker Madeleine Lee moving to
Washington to revive her social life. She quickly starts playing
hostess to a number of important politicians, including John
Carrington and Silas Ratcliffe, men of opposite demeanors, both of
whom are looking for a wife. Entwined with this comedy of manners
are Adams's own commentary on politics, corruption, and the great
political issues of the day, including suffrage and evolution.
Originally written for close friends and family The Education of
Henry Adams was released to the public only after the death of its
author, American historian HENRY BROOKS ADAMS (1838-1918), a member
of the Adams political family, Harvard professor of medieval
history, and a journalist dedicated to exposing corruption. A
reflective chronicle of life as a man crossing eras, Adams details
how he saw the world around him change from the 19th century to the
20th. The schooling he had as a child left him wholly unprepared
for the newer, faster world. The 20th century was dominated by
scientific development, and Adams's education had been grounded in
classical literature and history-areas that, he believed, offered
no real advantages to modern man. Readers interested in historical
periods of transition will find this autobiography a moving and
thoughtful way to access the stresses and fears of those who lived
through the last great societal shift.
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Our Only Hope (Hardcover)
Margaret B. Adam
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R1,325
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Discovery Miles 10 570
Save R268 (20%)
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The relationship between evil and public affairs, as well as other
fields and professions in public life, has come to the fore as
institutions of government seek new ways to operate in an
environment of extreme mistrust. Unmasking Administrative Evil, 5th
Edition argues that the tendency toward administrative evil, as
manifested in acts of dehumanization and genocide, is deeply woven
into the identity of public affairs. Indeed, ordinary people may
simply act appropriately in their organizational role-in essence,
just doing what those around them would agree they should be
doing-and at the same time, participate in what a critical and
reasonable observer, usually well after the fact, would call evil.
Even worse, under conditions of moral inversion, ordinary people
can all too easily engage in acts of administrative evil while
believing that what they are doing is not only correct, but in
fact, good. This 5th edition offers important updates, including: A
thorough discussion of contemporary virtue ethics as the field has
evolved to offer an alternative to technical/rational ethics. An
all-new three-part structure (What is Administrative Evil?, History
and Cases, and The Future of Ethics in Praetorian Times) designed
to aid in course organization and instruction. All-new cases,
including an examination of the Flint water disaster, to provide
contemporary examples of how populations can be marginalized and
harmed by administrative processes that are blind to their
consequences until it is too late. Laying the groundwork for a more
ethical and democratic public life - one that recognizes its
potential for evil, and avoids state-sponsored dehumanization and
destruction - Unmasking Administrative Evil, 5th Edition is
required reading for all students of administrative ethics and
public service ethics, as well those in other administrative
sciences.
The most popular source of theological hope for modern Christians
is that of Jurgen Moltmann. Preachers, teachers, and lay people
reflect Moltmann's influence, with their hope in a this-worldly
eschatology and suffering God. However, an exclusive reliance on
that hope deprives the church of crucial resources in the face of
global economic, environmental, and military crises. Our Only Hope
explores Moltmannian hope and considers its costs before looking
elsewhere for additional contributions, from Thomas Aquinas'
theological virtue of hope to nihilism and beyond, in order to
encourage the church to sustain and practise hope in Jesus Christ,
our only hope.
Eugenics is the branch of biology concerned with the improvement of hereditary qualities in humans. It draws scientists into direct contact with social and political policy makers. Yet, eugenic movements which have been mainly implemented by politicians, often differ significantly from the original aims of the scientists. The four contributors to this volume examine the eugenic movements in Germany, France, Brazil, and the Soviet Union. The scientific components of those programmes are considered alongside the social, religious, and political forces which significantly altered the original scientific goals. The book opens up new and comparative perspectives on the history of eugenics and the social aspects of science in general.
Scholars of politics are comfortable theorizing about the
parliamentary process and individual political parties, but they
are often guilty of ignoring the role of individual citizens except
through opinion polls and voting statistics. Even at the local
level, the main focus of political theorists has traditionally been
on formal systems of government usually lauding representative
democracy as the standard for Western government while the
importance of participatory action at a local level has been vastly
underestimated. Correcting this imbalance, the renowned political
scholars who contribute to this volume outline both the theory and
practice of so-called "extra-formal democracy," wherein societal
governance is more accurately described as a "network activity" and
citizens, politicians, public administrators and other
professionals act together on issues or problems that are defined
as public. This new and complex form of democracy explored here in
three unique settings: the United States, the Netherlands, and
Denmark is increasingly regarded as an achievable vision for a
multi-faceted theory of government."
As our society ages, questions concerning the relations between
generations gain importance. The quality of human relations depends
on the quality of emotion communication, which is a significant
part of our daily interactions. Emotion expressions serve not only
to communicate how the expresser feels, but also to communicate
intentions (whether to approach or retreat) and personality traits
(such as dominance, trustworthiness, or friendliness) that
influence our decisions regarding whether and how to interact with
a person. Emotion Communication by the Aging Face and Body
delineates how aging affects emotion communication and person
perception by bringing together research across multiple
disciplines. Scholars and graduate students in the psychology of
aging, affective science, and social gerontology will benefit from
this over-view and theoretical framework.
This work, originally written in 1882, provides a biography of John
Randolph, a prominent figure in American national politics in the
early 1800s. Presenting relevant letters by Randolph, the book
covers his relations with the Jeffersonians and Jacksonians.
This work, originally written in 1882, provides a biography of John
Randolph, a prominent figure in American national politics in the
early 1800s. Presenting relevant letters by Randolph, the book
covers his relations with the Jeffersonians and Jacksonians.
This is a full-length history of the Western Electric Company,
which was the manufacturing arm of the Bell System. As manufacturer
in the communications revolutions in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries, Western Electric made products that accelerated
society's pace, such as telegraphs, telephones, an early computing
machine, radios, radar and transistors. Western's history offers
numerous examples of the difference between innovation and
implementation. The aftermath of Western's 1882 acquisition by Bell
Telephone, for instance, reveals vertical integration as a lengthy
process rather than a single event. Ironically, although Western
transformed business worldwide with innovations in areas such as
quality control and industrial psychology, the company was slow to
implement these innovations itself. Western's dual role as captive
supplier for a regulated monopoly and as government contractor led
to its most rapid change, in the area of civil rights.
In the early 1980s there were several published reports of recent,
unexplained increases in mortality of red spruce in the Adirondack
Mountains and the northern Appalachian Mountains of the eastern
United States. These reports coincided with documentation of
reductions in radial growth of several species of pine in the
southeastern United States, and with the severe, rapid, and
widespread decline of Norway spruce, silver fir, and some hardwoods
in central Europe. In all of these instances, atmospheric
deposition was hypothesized as the cause of the decline.
(Throughout this volume, we use the term "decline" to refer to a
loosely synchronized regional-scale deterioration of tree health
which is brought about by a combination of stress factors. These
may be biotic or abiotic in nature, and the combinations may differ
from site to site. ) Heated public debate about the causes and
possible cures for these forest declines ensued. Through the course
of this debate, it became clear that information about forest
health and air pollution effects on forests was inadequate to meet
policymakers' needs. Ecology and Decline of Red Spruce in the
Eastern United States addresses that gap for eastern spruce fir
forests and represents the culmination of a great deal of research
conducted in recent years. The focus is on red spruce because the
decline of red spruce was both dramatic and inexplicable and
because of the great amount of information gathered on red spruce.
Manufacturing the Future: A History of Western Electric is the first full-length history of the Western Electric Company, the manufacturing arm of the Bell System. As a manufacturer in the communications revolutions in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Western Electric made new products such as telegraphs, telephones, an early computing machine, radios, radar, and transistors. The book demonstrates, through Western's 1882 acquisition by Bell Telephone, that vertical integration was a lengthy process rather than a single event. It also shows the coming of age of industrial psychology and describes the advent of civil rights in corporate America.
Living with Momma offers personal narratives and sacred stories for
caregivers searching for measurable peace as they navigate
unexpected paths within 21st century families. 63 million Americans
are caring for aging parents and grown children at the same time,
and they often find themselves wondering, "How is it possible to
care for our families and ourselves at the same time?" In Living
with Momma, Elizabeth Adams, an author and pastor, uses her life
experiences, along with the wisdom found in open-ended questions,
to show caregivers who are serious about establishing rewarding
relationships with adult family members how they can enjoy their
challenging, outdated living arrangements. She offers caregivers
three questions to ask for immediate change and helps them find a
safe space of hope and faith to protect themselves from caregiver
fatigue.
The relationship between evil and public affairs, as well as other
fields and professions in public life, has come to the fore as
institutions of government seek new ways to operate in an
environment of extreme mistrust. Unmasking Administrative Evil, 5th
Edition argues that the tendency toward administrative evil, as
manifested in acts of dehumanization and genocide, is deeply woven
into the identity of public affairs. Indeed, ordinary people may
simply act appropriately in their organizational role-in essence,
just doing what those around them would agree they should be
doing-and at the same time, participate in what a critical and
reasonable observer, usually well after the fact, would call evil.
Even worse, under conditions of moral inversion, ordinary people
can all too easily engage in acts of administrative evil while
believing that what they are doing is not only correct, but in
fact, good. This 5th edition offers important updates, including: A
thorough discussion of contemporary virtue ethics as the field has
evolved to offer an alternative to technical/rational ethics. An
all-new three-part structure (What is Administrative Evil?, History
and Cases, and The Future of Ethics in Praetorian Times) designed
to aid in course organization and instruction. All-new cases,
including an examination of the Flint water disaster, to provide
contemporary examples of how populations can be marginalized and
harmed by administrative processes that are blind to their
consequences until it is too late. Laying the groundwork for a more
ethical and democratic public life - one that recognizes its
potential for evil, and avoids state-sponsored dehumanization and
destruction - Unmasking Administrative Evil, 5th Edition is
required reading for all students of administrative ethics and
public service ethics, as well those in other administrative
sciences.
Remote Sensing of Landscapes with Spectral Images describes how to
process and interpret spectral images using physical models to
bridge the gap between the engineering and theoretical sides of
remote-sensing and the world that we encounter when we venture
outdoors. The emphasis is on the practical use of images rather
than on theory and mathematical derivations. Examples are drawn
from a variety of landscapes and interpretations are tested against
the reality seen on the ground. The reader is led through analysis
of real images (using figures and explanations); the examples are
chosen to illustrate important aspects of the analytic framework.
This textbook will form a valuable reference for graduate students
and professionals in a variety of disciplines including ecology,
forestry, geology, geography, urban planning, archaeology and civil
engineering. It is supplemented by a website hosting digital colour
versions of figures in the book as well as ancillary images:
www.cambridge.org/9780521662214.
The human visual system is particularly attuned to and remarkably
efficient at processing social cues. We can effectively "read"
others' mental and emotional states and make snap judgments about
their characters and dispositions, simply by watching them. Given
what is clearly a close relationship between vision and social
interaction, it has become increasingly clear to social
psychologists seeking to better understand the functional and
neuroanatomical mechanisms underlying social perception that vision
plays a critical role in the development and maintenance of social
exchange. Likewise, vision scientists have come to appreciate the
profound impact people, as social agents, have had on the visual
system, acknowledging just how important it is to consider the
socially adaptive functions that system evolved to perform.
The Science of Social Vision explores the biologically determined
to the culturally shaped influences on social vision. Four themes
emerge throughout the 25 chapters from leaders in the field. These
include:
1) Visually mediated attention moderates complex social
interactions and plays a critical role in the development of social
cognition;
2) Visual features perceptually determine categorical thinking and
have profound downstream consequences including stereotype
activation;
3) Perceptual experiences can be directly triggered by visual cues,
in which case, visual and social perception are essentially
equivalent processes;
4) Social factors exert powerful top-down influences on even
low-level visual perception, at some times biasing, while at others
fine-tuning perceptual acuity.
This book heralds the new field of social vision, and showcases the
cutting edge and broadly interdisciplinary research that is
currently at its forefront. Together the perspectives drawn from
these various fields offer unique insight into the origin, adaptive
purpose, and cognitive, cultural, and biological underpinnings of
social vision that will help to shape and guide the way we think
about and examine social visual perception. The Science of Social
Vision will provide a valuable resource for students and scholars
across a wide range of fields, including cognitive, developmental,
and social psychology, vision science, cognitive neuroscience,
social neuroscience, and ethology.
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