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The number of women elected to Latin American legislatures has
grown significantly over the past thirty years. This increase in
the number of women elected to national office is due, in large
part, to gender-friendly electoral rules such as gender quotas and
proportional electoral systems, and it has, in turn, fostered
constituent support for representative democracy. Still, this book
argues that women are gaining political voice and bringing women's
issues to state agendas, but they are not gaining political power.
Women are marginalized by the male majority in office and relegated
to the least powerful committees and leadership posts, hindering
progress toward real political equality.
In Political Power and Women's Representation in Latin America,
Leslie Schwindt-Bayer examines the causes and consequences of
women's representation in Latin America. She does so by asking a
series of politically relevant and theoretically challenging
questions, including why the numbers of women in office have
increased in some countries but vary across others; what the
presence of women in office means for the way representatives
legislate; and what consequences the election of women bears for
representative democracy more generally.
Schwindt-Bayer articulates a comprehensive theory of women's
representation that analyzes and connects trends in relation to
four facets of political representation: formal, descriptive,
substantive and symbolic. She then tests this theory empirically
using aggregate data from all eighteen Latin American democracies
and original fieldwork in Argentina, Colombia and Costa Rica.
Ultimately, this book communicates the complex and often incomplete
nature of women's political representation in Latin America.
Just as Latin American countries began to transition to democracy
in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the region also saw gains in
social, cultural and economic gender equality. In accordance with
modernization theories, women in the region have also made
significant inroads into elected office. However, these gains vary
a great deal between countries in Latin America. They also vary
significantly at different levels of government even within the
same country. Inside government arenas, representation is highly
gendered with rules and norms that advantage men and disadvantage
women, limiting women's access to full political power. While one
might expect these variations to map onto socioeconomic and
cultural conditions within each country, they don't correlate. This
book makes, for the first time, a comprehensive comparison of
gender and representation across the region - in seven countries -
and at five different levels: the presidency, cabinets, national
legislatures, political parties, and subnational governments.
Overall, it argues that gender inequality in political
representation in Latin America is rooted in democratic
institutions and the democratic challenges and political crises
facing the region. Institutions and political context not only
influence the number of women and men elected to office, but also
what they do once in office, the degree of power to which they gain
access, and how their presence and actions influence democracy and
society, more broadly. Drawing on the expertise of scholars of
women, gender, and political institutions, this book is the most
comprehensive analysis of women's representation in Latin America
to date, and an important resource for research on women's
representation worldwide. The causes, consequences, and challenges
to women's representation in Latin America are not unique to that
region, and the book uses Latin American patterns to draw broad
conclusions about gendered representation in other areas of the
world.
The ESV Journaling Study Bible pairs the content of a robust study
Bible with extra-large, 2-inch margins that are perfect for writing
observations, prayers, and more as you study God’s Word. Featuring more
than 12,000 study notes adapted from the ESV Study Bible, this
journaling Bible also includes nearly 900 special facts, 120 Bible
character profiles, 10 topical articles, a glossary of key terms, more
than 80 maps and illustrations, and 80,000 cross-references. These and
many other features make it the most comprehensive and content-rich
journaling Bible available today.
• 7.5-point type size
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Gizmo & Dash (Hardcover)
Steve Bayer; Illustrated by Sviatoslav Franko
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This open access book offers the first in-depth study of the
history and current debates surrounding electronic cigarettes
comparing the UK, US and Australia. Since their introduction,
e-cigarettes have been the subject of much public, media and
regulatory attention, with discussion centring on whether these
devices encourage or discourage smoking. This study delves into the
history of policymaking and institutions in three countries which
have taken different approaches to the regulation of e-cigarettes.
In the UK, the tradition of harm reduction through nicotine has
helped form a response which has endorsed e-cigarettes, though not
without considerable controversy. In contrast, the US has a
cessation-only anti-tobacco agenda, and Australia has effectively
banned e-cigarettes. This book argues that each country frames the
long-term use of nicotine differently and prioritises the health of
different groups within the population of smokers or non-smokers,
set against a broad backdrop of national responses to addiction. By
taking this comparative approach, the authors explore the
relationship between history, evidence and policy in public health
more widely.
The study of nature is a complex science involving many different
fields from geology and meteorology to biology, zoology, and
botany. This complexity indicates nature's broad scope of impact.
It is at once beautiful and dangerous, displaying power beyond
human control. An understanding of the basic principles and
concepts of the study of nature is therefore both enriching and
practical. In The Handbook of Nature, authors Frank R. Spellman and
Joni Price-Bayer provide a comprehensive guide to the study of
nature in terms the layperson can grasp easily. This accessible
reference work is for the non-specialist looking for quick,
accurate information on all aspects of the study of nature. The
handbook is arranged thematically for a logical and user-friendly
progression through the material. It includes chapters on the
earth's structure and landforms, the atmosphere and weather, water
and water sources, and the many different forms of life from
single-celled organisms to complex vertebrates. Along with basic
natural scientific principles, the authors look closely at the
consequences of human interactions with the environment we inhabit.
This reference concludes with a glossary and index, and each
chapter provides further resources and recommended reading. It is
an essential tool for students and professionals alike.
In most countries around the world, women continue to lag behind
men in an array of political orientations and activities.
Understanding why this is the case and why some countries have been
more successful than others at moderating gender gaps in political
involvement is imperative for producing stronger and more
representative democracies. Cultural, socioeconomic, and political
factors explain some of the gender gaps in political involvement,
but not all of them. In this book, the authors argue that electoral
institutions attenuate gender gaps in mass political engagement and
participation by drawing women, an 'undertapped' constituency, into
the democratic process. Using cross-national and country-specific
analyses, the authors show that electoral institutions play a
complementary and significant role in reducing gender gaps in
political involvement. The cross-national analyses draw on
comparative survey data from a wide range and large number of
countries. The case studies draw out the processes underlying
changes in political attitudes and behaviors with evidence from
four country studies: New Zealand, Russia, France, and Uruguay. All
four countries have altered their electoral institutions, either
through large-scale reform of the electoral system itself or
adopting gender quotas, allowing the authors to examine patterns of
political involvement pre- and post-reform. The book finds that
inclusive electoral systems that produce more proportional
electoral outcomes have larger effects on women's political
engagement and participation than on men's. Gender quotas also
mediate women's engagement and participation, but to a lesser
degree. On the whole, the book concludes that electoral rules
designed to promote social inclusion in parliament are critical for
promoting social group inclusion among the electorate. Comparative
Politics is a series for students, teachers, and researchers of
political science that deals with contemporary government and
politics. Global in scope, books in the series are characterised by
a stress on comparative analysis and strong methodological rigour.
The series is published in association with the European Consortium
for Political Research. For more information visit: www.ecprnet.eu.
The Comparative Politics Series is edited by Professor David M.
Farrell, School of Politics and International Relations, University
College Dublin, Kenneth Carty, Professor of Political Science,
University of British Columbia, and Professor Dirk Berg-Schlosser,
Institute of Political Science, Philipps University, Marburg.
This set includes Volumes 1-7 of 15 short atlases reimagining the
classic 5 volume Atlas of Human Central Nervous System Development.
A handy paperback edition completes the coverage of the first
trimester of human brain development. Serial sections from
specimens between 4mm and 60mm are illustrated and annotated in
great detail, together with 3D reconstructions. An introduction and
glossary summarize these earliest stages of human Central Nervous
System development. Key Features 1) Classic anatomical atlases 2)
Detailed labeling of the earliest phases of prenatal neurological
development 3) Appeals to neuroanatomists, developmental biologists
and clinical practitioners. 4) Persistent relevance - brain
development is not going to change.
Sedimentary basins host, among others, most of our energy and
fresh-water resources: they can be regarded as large geo-reactors
in which many physical and chemical processes interact. Their
complexity can only be well understood in well-organized
interdisciplinary co-operations.
This book documents how researchers from different
geo-scientific disciplines have jointly analysed the structural,
thermal, and sedimentary evolution as well as fluid dynamics of a
complex sedimentary basin system which has experienced a variety of
activation and reactivation impulses as well as intense salt
tectonics. In this book we have summarized our geological,
geophysical and geochemical understanding of some of the most
important processes affecting sedimentary basins in general and our
view on the evolution of one of the largest, best explored and most
complex continental sedimentary basins on Earth: The Central
European Basin System.
The Workbook contains a wide variety of review and practice
exercises and covers all of the language areas in the corresponding
Students' Book unit. It also contains regular review sections to
help learners consolidate what they have learned. Intermediate:
Global Scale of English 46-58
German is a language which has received a lot of attention in
linguistics, and data from German had a substantial in?uence on the
formation of linguistic theory. The in?uence this language had so
far on psycholinguistics and on s- tactic processing in particular
is much more limited, although the last 10 years have seen a
growing interest in psycholinguistic investigations of German. The
present monograph will build on earlier work and develop it further
toward an account of syntactic comprehension on the basis of
theoretical as well as - perimental investigations. The verb-?nal
nature, the free order of constituents, and the morphological Case
system of German offer a rich domain for exp- rations which will be
shown to reshape our knowledge about human sentence processing in
general. Much of the research which led to this monograph has been
carried out at theFriedrichSchiller
UniversityJenaandhasbeenconcluded atKonstanzU- versity. Our
research has been supported between 1997 and 2005 by grant Ba
1178/4 of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) under the title
L- guage Comprehension and Variable Word Order - Syntactic and
Extrasyntactic Factors in Processing German Sentences. We are
indebted to the DFG for this continuous support over the years, and
in particular to Dr. Manfred Briegel and Dr. Susanne Anschutz for
their administrative help."
Directionality and Logical Form provides a detailed treatment of
the syntax of focusing particles, such as only and even in a
cross-linguistic perspective. The derivation of logical forms is
shown to be under the control, not only of the ECP and subjacency,
but also of directionality of government and the particular
word-order parameter that holds in a given language: head-final
languages systematically disallow certain derivations or readings
that are available in head-initial languages. The reason is that
heads that deviate in their selection properties from canonical
head-finality project a directionality barrier. Various strategies
are explored by which this barrier can be circumvented. Although
the theory is developed mainly on the basis of the head position in
German, it can be directly used to explain constraints on the scope
of Wh-in-situ in Bengali and closely related languages. Audience:
Syntacticians and semanticists interested in parametric variation,
as well as linguists working on Germanic and/or Indo-Aryan
languages.
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