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The title story details the author's experiences from birth through
childhood and on into adulthood and of coming to terms with the
vagaries of life and the human condition in its myriad
manifestations. The world of the author unfolds as she journeys
from home to embark on her nursing career as she shares her
experiences with fractured relationships; sickness and health; with
love and loss; and finally with death and dying and the grieving
process-and the realization that communication with loved ones
continues even beyond the grave.
Covering two hundred years, this groundbreaking book brings
together essays on borderlands by leading experts in the modern
history of the Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia to
offer the first historical study of borderlands with a global
reach.
" Turbulent Waters: Cross-Border Finance and International
Governance advocates faster progress in reforming the international
financial system. Its most important theme is the need for national
governments and international organizations to upgrade their
collective efforts at crisis prevention and prosperity management.
The core of such efforts is the supranational surveillance of
cross-border ""traffic regulations"" and the cooperative monitoring
of nations' macroeconomic, exchange rate, and balance-of-payments
policies. Concurrently, governments should streamline and
strengthen the intermediation of intergovernmental lending for the
liability financing of payments deficits through the International
Monetary Fund. This essay gives detailed analysis supporting these
conclusions and provides more technical discussion of the
incremental policy measures needed to strengthen these collective
efforts. "
Today's world is organized politically into nation states with
sovereign national governments. But as Ralph C. Bryant explains in
Turbulent Waters, the world's economic structure is outgrowing its
political structure. The economic links among nations have
increased more rapidly than economic activity itself. As economic
integration has proceeded, borders have become more porous,
differences among national economies have eroded, and the policy
autonomy of national governments has been undermined.
Collective-governance problems increasingly spill across national
borders and thus grow in importance relative to problems of
domestic governance. The evolving need for international
cooperation and cross-border collective governance is likely to be
the single most prominent feature of world politics and economics
for at least the next half century. The progressive integration of
the world economy, often called " globalization, " has been
especially dramatic for financial activity. Cross-border financial
transactions facilitate saving and investment and thereby advance
the well-being of individuals. But they can also generate
turbulence and instability. Most individuals are unsure whether
financial globalization promotes or threatens prosperity for a
majority of the world's people. Bryant explains basic concepts
about financial activity and collective governance, distills their
international dimensions, and enables general readers to acquire a
solid grasp of the key policy issues that national governments must
resolve. He provides fresh insights about what is often termed the
international financial architecture. But he also casts his net far
wider: the book's ambitious goal is no lessthan to outline a
pragmatically sound vision for the evolution of international
governance for the world economy and financial system.
Many multicellular animals do not require oxygen to live but
respire anaerobically. Some of these have adapted to "hostile"
environments, such as sulphide rich habitats, others live as
parasites within host organisms, while others still can perhaps be
said to look back on the early days of life on earth before
anaerobic respiration had evolved. This comprehensive volume lays
out detailed summaries of the strategies for anero- or anoxy-biosis
employed by each major group of metazoan animals. It begins with a
description of the physical chemistry of oxygen, followed by a
dissertation on the perils - and opportunities - created for life
by oxygen derived free radicals. It moves on to examine the
geochronology of the accumulation of oxygen in the environment and
to analyze the first explosive adaptive radiation of the Metazoa in
the Ediacarian and early Cambrian. It then explores the
biochemistry of sulphide dependent organisms and follows with a
detailed account of the evolution of fumarate reductase, the enzyme
system that makes anaerobiosis possible in many invertebrate phyla.
After the survey of invertebrate phyla, there is a chapter
concerned with the strategies adopted by various vertebrates for
anoxybiotic survival, and one on the dependence of many vertebrates
on anaerobic processes. The contributors are authorities from
around the world. The approach to the subject is an evolutionary
one, drawing from many fields in biology. This book should be of
interest to parasitologists, comparative biochemists, evolutionary
biologists, palaeontologists and geochemists.
In recent years, parasitologists have learned much about the way in
which parasite biochemistry differs from that of free-living
organisms. Inside the host, factors such as temperature, oxygen
tension, carbon dioxide concentration and pH have important
consequences for the biochemistry and physiology of the parasitic
organism. Strong selection pressure therefore operates at all
stages of a parasite's life cycle. The parasite's adaptational
response to this pressure is the subject of this book. Under the
headings "The nature of parasite adaptation", "Energy metabolism",
"Digestion and uptake of nutrients", "Host immunity and parasite
adaptation", "Biochemical adaptation and the magic bullet" and
"Biochemical variation in parasites", present knowledge of parasite
metabolism and how it reflects adaptation to particular
environments is surveyed. The ways in which these adaptations may
have developed during their evolution - with reference to the
modern evolution of strain variations and the development of
resistance to antiparasitic compounds - are explored, together with
immunological aspects of the host-parasite relationship and
potential metabolic targets for chemotherapy. This book should be
of use to all those involved and interested in the biochemistry of
parasites and its relation to their evolution, ecology, adaptation
and variation. Those aspects of parasite metabolism that are
attacked by anti-parasitic drugs are described, making this a
useful book for those involved in the pharmaceutical industry. This
book should be of interest to parasitologists and comparative
biochemists.
The world's governing structures are higgledy-piggledy: disorderly,
heads and tails in any or every direction. Such disorder fosters
deficient governance. Decisions by noncooperating nations can
generate damaging crossborder outcomes. Muddles destabilize mutual
well-being.Public debate is often mired in superficial arguments
about "globalization." This insightful book by economist Ralph C.
Bryant instead emphasizes that the world's nations need to craft
better middle-ground compromises to improve governance and manage
increasing integration. Individual nations, Bryant argues, should
fashion a balance between local autonomy and external openness,
avoiding the extremes of rigid localism and unfettered openness.
And nations need to act together collectively. Cooperative
governance can encourage orderliness that mitigates disarray
undermining mutual goals. The global challenge of the coronavirus
pandemic is a vivid reminderthat international cooperation is
becoming progressively more essential. Do nations and their leaders
have sufficient foresight to use borders not as barriers but as
catalysts for international cooperation? Could national migration
policies find sustainable middle ground between the unrealistic
extreme of unfettered freedom for people to cross borders and the
inhumane exclusion of foreign refugees? Could augmented
cross-border cooperation mitigate dangers from recurring financial
instability? Could the world community foster collective actions to
reduce the severe risks of global climate change? The answer to
such questions can and should be yes. Wiser cross-border collective
action nurtures a mutually supportive order offsetting the threats
of disorder that may otherwise prevail. A healthy evolution of our
planet requires requires! more orderly national governance and more
ambitious cross-border cooperation.
Jen and Rosie plan to take the Lumberjane scouts to see an amazing
astronomical event, but with a gatecrashing goddess, a
kitten-napping, and secret crushes coming to light this is a night
no one ever expected! STOLEN KITTIES, SECRET CRUSHES & A NIGHT
TO REMEMBER! Jen and Rosie plan to take the Lumberjane scouts to
see an amazing astronomical event. But their night of star-gazing
is thrown off course when half of the Roanoke and Zodiac cabins
sneak away into the night in search of aliens, leaving everyone
else to deal with a gatecrashing goddess who throws the entire camp
into a tizzy. Not to mention there's a nefarious kitten-napping and
a super-secret crush to contend with! Writers Kat Leyh and Shannon
Watters team up with talented newcomer Kanesha C. Bryant for the
next volume of the New York Times best-selling phenomenon that
takes Friendship To The Max! Collects Lumberjanes #65-68.
Covering two hundred years, this groundbreaking book brings
together essays on borderlands by leading experts in the modern
history of the Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia to
offer the first historical study of borderlands with a global
reach.
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Lumberjanes Vol. 18 (Paperback)
Kat Leyh, Shannon Watters; Illustrated by Kanesha C Bryant
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R283
R223
Discovery Miles 2 230
Save R60 (21%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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When April, Jo, Mal, Molly, and Ripley get in trouble with Rosie,
the mysterious director of Miss Qiunzella Thiskwin Penniquiqul
Thistle Crumpet's Camp for Hardcore Lady Types, they figure the
punishment is gonna be a walk in the park... er, woods, but no
one's ready for the surprises that await! THEY'RE NOT OUT OF THE
WOODS QUITE YET! When April, Jo, Mal, Molly, and Ripley get in
trouble with Rosie, the mysterious director of Miss Qiunzella
Thiskwin Penniquiqul Thistle Crumpet's Camp for Hardcore
Lady-Types, they figure the punishment is gonna be a walk in the
park... er, woods. That's before a super gross, and
seemingly-sentient creeping vine starts popping up everywhere and
scooping 'Janes up! And then there's Rosie's best friend from long
ago: the elegant and enigmatic Abigail, who's appeared out of the
woodwork to join forces with the Lumberjanes once more! The team of
Kat Leyh, Shannon Watters and Kanesha C. Bryant send the 'Janes on
their most surprising adventure yet in the next volume of the New
York Times best-selling phenomenon. Collects Lumberjanes #69-72.
New modes of practice are now emerging in architecture. Rural
Studio, Exyzt, Muf, Assemble and many more have led the way by
challenging conventional ideas of 'The Architect' and reclaiming
the notion of architecture as something public that should work
ultimately towards the collective good. This quiet revolution is
born out of a crisis in the profession and a wider vacuum in the
political, environmental and economic situation. On the one hand,
architecture as a profession has seen its influence diminish
rapidly over the last 50 years through privatisation and the
dominance of finance, while on the other hand it has also lacked
collective courage and readiness to evolve. Without necessarily
being aware of each other, studios around the world are now
redefining the profession of architecture as something more
proactive, self-aware and political. They are broadening their
skill sets and becoming deeply involved in their projects,
initiating them themselves, financing them and running them. Though
much of this work is dealing with local issues at a relatively
small scale, it is inherently ambitious with global application.
Contributors include: Shumi Bose, Indy Johar, Alison Killing,
Douglas Murphy, and Finn Williams Featured architects: Aterlier
d'Architecture Autogeree (AAA), adamo-faiden; Baupiloten, Grupo
Toma, Hector, Inteligencias Colectivas, raumlaborberlin,
studioBASAR, Studio GutGut, Taller Ken, and We Made That.
The long-awaited companion title to MY MONSTER BOYFRIEND is finally
here! The latest in the Smut Peddler series of high-end erotic
anthologies, MY MONSTER GIRLFRIEND shows off the femme side of sexy
ghosts, werewolves, demons, and other horrors that go bump in the
night. No bedside table can be complete without this collection of
spicy tales from the dark side in the tried-and-true Smut Peddler
style: broadly diverse, sex-positive, consent-driven, and tons of
fun!
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