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This study uses a comparative analysis of the Malayan Emergency,
the American experience in Vietnam, and Operation IRAQI FREEDOM to
examine the role and effectiveness of artillery units in complex
counterinsurgency environments. Through this analysis, four factors
emerge which impact the employment of artillery units: the
counterinsurgency effort's requirement for indirect fires;
constraints and limitations on indirect fires; the
counterinsurgency effort's force organization; and the conversion
cost of nonstandard roles for artillery units. In conclusion, the
study offers five broadly descriptive fundamentals for employing
artillery units in a counterinsurgency environment: invest in
tactical leadership, exploit lessons learned, support the
operational approach and strategic framework, maintain pragmatic
fire support capability, and minimize collateral damage. Finally,
the study examines the role of education for leaders in a
counterinsurgency, and its influence on these imperative
fundamentals.
Have we medicated our faith? Have we replaced our faith in God with
quick fixes? When we are sick, do we reach for the medicine only?
Or do we also reach toward heaven to the One who made us? There has
been a consistent increase in the amount of medications Americans
are consuming over the past decades, and the numbers continue to
increase. If faith increased at the rate that the intake of
prescription drugs increased, miracles would become the norm, and
healing would be an everyday occurrence. When Jesus was on the
earth, faith in His ability to heal, out measured medications. Now
we have more medicines than we have faith. The scales have tipped
over. Jesus proposed this question to the disciples. "Nevertheless
when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?" It
seems that the world's faith in God continues to diminish instead
of growing. When the Lord returns to the earth, I pray that He will
find faith in the earth. The Lord is not against His children
seeking the help of physicians and medicines, but He also wants His
children to seek His help and "Don't medicate your faith "
Substance abuse, gambling, sexual promiscuity, violence, mental
health problems, suicide: all are risky and dangerous consequences
of adolescent instability. Through the implementation of
psychological research and basic theories, Johnson and Malow-Iroff
expertly assess each specific risk behavior as it correlates with
demographics, socio-economic statuses, and cultural factors
surrounding today's youth. In addition, this book provides
resources for handling harmful situations facing adolescents,
offering practical and straightforward methods to aid one in
negotiating positive paths for those in distress. Parents,
educators, and adolescents alike will only benefit from knowing the
causes of adolescent risk-taking and the ways of preventing such
behavior. Each chapter is devoted to a specific risk that many
adolescents take throughout their teenage years. These include:
drug abuse, gambling, sex, violence, and suicide. Johnson and
Malow-Iroff discuss the mental health problems that lead to
dangerous activities. Each topic explains the causes that lead to
these risky behaviors, ways to prevent them, and advice that will
be useful to parents and educators in addressing these issues.
This issue of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics devoted
to Life Care Planning is Guest Edited by Michel Lacerte, MD,
Richard Paul Bonfiglio, MD, and Cloie B. Johnson, M.Ed., ABVE, CCM.
This issue will focus on the long-term care of a patient's
rehabilitation, typically after a major life event. Articles in
this issue will focus on the life care planning of patients with
spinal cord injury, acquired brain injury, spinal pain, Cerebral
Palsy, neuropathic pain, and life care planning for amputees. Other
articles in this issue include: The Life Care Planning Process; The
Physiatrist's Role in Life Care Planning; Life Expectancy
Determination; and Vocational Rehabilitation and Work Life
Expectancy.
Unique and wonderful recipes that include cannabis. A full body
high, unlike smoking it. It's a great way for those that need
cannabis for medication that cannot smoke it. A great start for
anyone who is interested in cooking in medicinal foods. For the
professional and the beginning cook. Over 70 very unique recipes
that anyone interested in this type of cooking will enjoy to learn
and experiment with. Each recipe comes complete with nutritional
facts and serving size. this book is the first of a five book
series.
Most business leaders struggle mightily when transitioning from
working in the U.S. or any modern country to working in Shanghai,
Dubai, Nairobi or Pune. Despite organizational efforts to
facilitate this transition through training and coaching, leaders
often find themselves bewildered and frustrated by the unwritten
and often unacknowledged cultural dictates of a given country.
These leaders struggle with everything from motivating direct
reports to getting deals done. They discover that their best
practices have little to do with the practices that have been
ingrained in societies for thousands of years. This book is written
to provide inside information about working outside traditional
business environments. It presents nine rules that will serve
leaders well no matter where they're stationed--Asia, South
America, the Middle East and elsewhere. As readers will discover,
these rules are not taught in typical global leadership courses.
Instead, they have emerged from the work of the authors with
leading companies in foreign countries or from our efforts to coach
others in all parts of the globe.
Thomas Hahn's work laid the foundations for medieval romance
studies to embrace the study of alterity and hybridity within
Middle English literature. His contributions to scholarship brought
Robin Hood studies into the critical mainstream, normalized the
study of historically marginalized literature and peoples, and
encouraged scholars to view medieval readers as actively
encountering others and exploring themselves. This volume employs
his methodologies - careful attention to texts and their contexts,
cross-cultural readings, and theoretically-informed analysis - to
highlight the literary culture of late medieval England afresh.
Addressing long-established canonical works such as Chaucer,
Christine de Pizan, and Malory alongside understudied traditions
and manuscripts, this book will be of interest to literary scholars
of the later Middle Ages who, like Hahn, work across boundaries of
genre, tradition, and chronology.
Essays on the use, and misuse, of the Middle Ages for political
aims. Like its two immediate predecessors, this volume tackles the
most pressing and contentious issue in medievalism studies: how the
Middle Ages have been subsequently deployed for political ends. The
six essays in the first section directly address that concern with
regard to Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges's contemporaneous
responses to the 1871 Commune; the hypocrisy of the Robinhood App's
invocation of their namesake; misunderstood parallels and
differences between the Covid-19 pandemic and medieval plagues;
Peter Gill's reworking of a major medieval Mystery play in his 2001
The York Realist; celebrations of medieval monks by the American
alt-right; and medieval references in twenty-first-century novels
by the American neo-Nazi Harold A. Covington. The approaches and
conclusions of those essays are then tested in the second section's
seven articles as they examine widely discredited alt-right claims
that strong kings ruled medieval Finland; Norse medievalism in WWI
British and German propaganda; post-war Black appropriation of
white jousting tournaments in the Antebellum South; early American
references to the Merovingian Dynasty; Rudyard Kipling's deployment
of the Middle Ages to defend his beliefs; the reframing of St.
Anthony by Agustina Bessa-Luis's 1973 biography of him; and
post-medieval Portuguese reworkings of the Goat-Foot-Lady and other
medieval legends.
Infancy and Culture: An International Review and Source Book
provides a cross-indexed, annotated guide to social and behavioral
studies of infants of color. Derived from five major data bases of
published scientific literature, this volume was designed to
elevate the scientific study of infants of color to a level
reflecting their majority status in the world's population. While
the vast majority of the world's infants are infants of color, a
scan of 175 journals only resulted in 386 studies. This crisply
underscores the need to intensify studies of cross-culture and
within-culture variability, in order to broaden our understanding
of the cultural impact on social and behavioral development during
the first few years of human life. Infancy and Culture takes a
small step in that direction by cataloging the extant literature by
geographic region, and by cross-indexing it by topical content.
Citations are numbered consecutively throughout the text and both
author and subject indexes are pegged to the citation number, not
to page numbers, thereby facilitating one's search for all
published literature related to a particular topic. Finally, the
editors provide a brief summary of the research for each chapter in
the volume.
In 1983, then-US Vice President George H.W. Bush delivered a speech
in London. He had just been in West Berlin and spoke about his
first visit to the Berlin Wall. Bush then went on to describe
another German wall he saw after Berlin: "if anything, that wall
was an even greater obscenity than its eponym to the north." The
story of that wall is a fascinating and valuable slice of the
history of post-war Europe. That wall had gone up nearly two
hundred miles southwest of Berlin at the edge of divided Germany,
in the tiny, remote farming village of Moedlareuth. For nearly half
the twentieth century, the Iron Curtain divided Moedlareuth in two.
In this little valley surrounded by forests and fields, the
villagers of Moedlareuth found themselves on the literal front-line
of the Cold War. The East German state gradually militarized the
border through the community while eastern villagers exhibited a
range of responses to cope with their changing circumstances,
reflective of the variable nature of the Cold War border through
Germany: along the Iron Curtain, the size and isolation of the
divided place influenced the local character of the division.
New essays examining the differences and commonalities between late
Weimar-era and early Nazi-era German cinema against a backdrop of
the crises of that time. Hitler's Machtergreifung, or seizure of
power, on January 30, 1933, marked the end of the Weimar Republic
and the beginning of the Third Reich, and German film scholarship
has generally accepted this date as the break between Weimar and
Nazi-era film as well. This collection of essays interrogates the
continuities and discontinuities in German cinema before and after
January 1933 and their relationship to the various crises of the
years 1928 to 1936in seven areas: politics, the economy, concepts
of race and ethnicity, the making of cinema stars, genre cinema,
film technologies and aesthetics, and German-international film
relations. Focusing both on canonical and lesser-known works, the
essays analyze a representative sample of films and genres from the
period. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of
Weimar and Third Reich cinema and of the sociopolitical, economic,
racial, artistic, and technological spheres in both late Weimar and
the early Third Reich, as well as to film scholars in general.
Contributors: Paul Flaig, Margrit Froelich, Barbara Hales, Anjeana
Hans, Bastian Heinsohn, Brook Henkel,Kevin B. Johnson, Owen Lyons,
Richard W. McCormick, Kalani Michell, Mihaela Petrescu, Christian
Rogowski, Valerie Weinstein, Wilfried Wilms. Barbara Hales is
Associate Professor of History at the University of Houston-Clear
Lake. Mihaela Petrescu is Visiting Lecturer at the University of
Pittsburgh. Valerie Weinstein is Assistant Professor of Women's,
Gender, and Sexuality Studies and German Studies at the University
of Cincinnati.
While in the late 1970s and early 1980s health compliance research
on adults represented a vigorous field of study, a marked decline
of interest on the topic set in during the last part of the 1980s.
By contrast, research on health compliance involving pediatric
populations was less popular during the same period; however,
interest in this topic -- as evidenced by the contributions to this
volume -- is on the increase. Four main themes -- relating to
theory, measurement, prevention, and intervention -- emerge and are
interwoven among the chapters. These themes help to bind and unify
the volume into a conceptual whole because although the sections
are divided along thematic lines, contributors often include
elements of some or all of the themes in their chapters. This state
of affairs reflects the interdependence of these thematic issues
and suggests how important they are for the state of the art.
The International Federation for Information Processing, IFIP, is a
multinational federation of professional technical organisations
concerned with information processing. IFIP is dedicated to
improving communication and increased understanding among
practitioners of all nations about the role information processing
can play in all walks of life. This Working Conference, Secondary
School Mathematics in the World of Communication Technologies:
Learning, Teaching and the Curriculum, was organised by Working
Group 3.1, Informatics in Secondary Education, ofiFIP Technical
Committee for Education, TC3. This is the third conference on this
theme organised by WG 3.1, the previous two were held in Varna,
Bulgaria, 1977, and Sofia, Bulgaria, 1987-proceedings published by
North-Holland Elsevier. The aim of the conference was to take a
forward look at the issue of the relationships between mathematics
and the new technologies of information and communication in the
context of the increased availability of interactive and dynamic
information processing tools. The main focus was on the mathematics
education of students in the age range of about ll to 18 years and
the following themes were addressed: * Curriculum: curriculum
evolution; relationships with informatics; * Teachers: professional
development; methodology and practice; * Learners: tools and
techniques; concept development; research and theory; * Human and
social issues: culture and policy; personal impact.
The field of medicinal/aromatic plant breeding is growing and
changing?this resource will help you stay up to date!
In this essential book, researchers from large and small
laboratories and institutions throughout Europe and the
Mediterranean region explore recent developments in the selection
and breeding of aromatic and medicinal plants. They take varied
approaches?from traditional breeding to the use of molecular
markers?and complement them with up-to-date information on
biodiversity and resource conservation.
"From the editors: ?It is widely recognized that a strategy of
conservation through use, ? by which plant collection via wild
harvesting is replaced by controlled cultivation, is the best way
forward if we are to balance human demands with the necessary
conservation of the biodiversity represented by these species. That
provides one major driving force for research in this field.
Another concerns the very real need for improving the quality
control of products on the market, both to satisfy consumer demand
and to conform with the (justifiably) increasing requirements for
standardization and precise identification of the composition of
the plant materials being sold for human use. We hope that this
volume will give readers a taste of the exciting developments in
the field.?"
Breeding Research on Aromatic and Medicinal Plants examines:
breeding for resistance and abiotic factors manipulating natural
product accumulation through genetic engineering biochemical and
molecular regulation of essential oil accumulation economic and
legal considerations that breeders will encounter the ethical
aspects of breeding these plants
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