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Political accommodation in Northern Ireland, Israel and South
Africa at the macro level may not, by itself, be sufficient to
achieve the long term goals of building peace and reconciliation.
This book uses Lederach's peace building model to explore issues
which may provide a basis for transformation and a lasting peace in
the three countries.
Countries that have suffered ethnic or religious conflict and
become segregated societies reflect these divisions in education
provision for their children. Northern Ireland is a case study in
point where a parallel system of schools offers education in
Catholic maintained schools and Protestant (de facto) controlled
schools. While school segregation is the most obvious manifestation
of Northern Ireland's fractured society, there are more important
issues of 'educational inequality' with respect to schools and
pupils. This book analyses three issues in some detail:
segregation, educational performance and inequality in educational
outcomes between schools and between pupils from deprived and
affluent family backgrounds. Thus far public policies to tackle
these issues have been met with limited success. The authors
consider an alternative approach, which they term 'shared
education', the aim of which is to improve school performance and,
in so doing, to dismantle some of the barriers between maintained
and controlled schools.
Informal Justice in Divided Societies examines the ways in which paramilitary and vigilante activity are linked with controlling community crime in both Northern Ireland and South Africa. Drawing upon original research, Colin Knox and Rachel Monaghan analyze the agents of informal justice, its victims, and why communities endorse this form of retribution. They conclude the book with a wider debate of the abuse of human rights suffered by many victims of community crime and tentatively highlight future policy implications.
The 22 papers in this volume illustrate the itinerary of Henry
Tulkens on the occasion of his retirement from teaching. The volume
presents contemporary analysis of Tulkens classic papers on public
sector economics. The collection is structured in four parts: I.
Decentralized resource allocation processes for public and private
goods - II. Environment, public goods and externalities - III.
Efficiency analysis - IV. Fiscal competition and optimality.
I realize that anyone sufficiently intrigued by the title so as to
open the cover of
This book represents the first comprehensive reference volume
available on subsurface transport and fate processes. The volume is
organized into four sections covering the basics of contaminant
properties and how they affect transport and fate, the fundamental
processes affecting subsurface transport and fate of contaminants,
applications of transport and fate information to various
contaminant types, and utilization of transport and fate
information for predicting contaminant behavior. Specific topics
such as traditional hydrodynamic processes of advection and
dispersion, facilitated transport and contaminant flushing, and
individual ground water contaminants are also explored in detail.
Subsurface Transport and Fate Processes is ideal for environmental
and ground water consultants, regulatory agency personnel, and
educators in geology, hydrogeology, civil engineering, and
environmental engineering.
Countries that have suffered ethnic or religious conflict and
become segregated societies reflect these divisions in education
provision for their children. Northern Ireland is a case study in
point where a parallel system of schools offers education in
Catholic maintained schools and Protestant (de facto) controlled
schools. While school segregation is the most obvious manifestation
of Northern Ireland's fractured society, there are more important
issues of 'educational inequality' with respect to schools and
pupils. This book analyses three issues in some detail:
segregation, educational performance and inequality in educational
outcomes between schools and between pupils from deprived and
affluent family backgrounds. Thus far public policies to tackle
these issues have been met with limited success. The authors
consider an alternative approach, which they term 'shared
education', the aim of which is to improve school performance and,
in so doing, to dismantle some of the barriers between maintained
and controlled schools.
Cambridge University's Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics is one
of the most celebrated academic positions in the world. Since its
foundation in 1663, the chair has been held by seventeen men who
represent some of the best and most influential minds in science
and technology. Principally a social history of mathematics and
physics, the story of these great natural philosophers and
mathematical physicists is told here by some of the finest
historians of science. The journey begins with the search for a
benefactor able to establish a 'mathematicus professor honorarius',
and travels through the life and work of the professors, exploring
aspects from the heroic to the absurd. Covering both the great
similarities and the extreme differences in mathematical physics
over the last four centuries, this informative work offers
interesting perspectives on world-famous scientists including Isaac
Newton, Charles Babbage, G. G. Stokes, Paul Dirac and Stephen
Hawking.
The 22 papers in this volume illustrate the itinerary of Henry
Tulkens on the occasion of his retirement from teaching. The volume
presents contemporary analysis of Tulkens classic papers on public
sector economics. The collection is structured in four parts: I.
Decentralized resource allocation processes for public and private
goods - II. Environment, public goods and externalities - III.
Efficiency analysis - IV. Fiscal competition and optimality.
PL/SQL is the procedural programming language of choice in the
Oracle database. It is completely integrated with SQL and is the
most fully optimized, highest performance language for database
transaction processing. This book is about effective techniques to
solve problems using PL/SQL.
This social history of mathematics and physics tells the story of Cambridge University's mathematical physicists. The University's Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics is one of the world's most celebrated academic positions. Since its foundation in 1663, the chair has been held by seventeen men who represent some of the most influential minds in science and technology. This informative work offers new perspectives on such world-famous scientists as Isaac Newton, Charles Babbage, Paul Dirac, and Stephen Hawking.
Informal Justice in Divided Societies examines the ways in which
paramilitary and vigilante activity are linked with controlling
community crime in both Northern Ireland and South Africa. Drawing
upon original research, Colin Knox and Rachel Monaghan analyze the
agents of informal justice, its victims and why communities endorse
this form of retribution. They conclude the book with a wider
debate of the abuse of human rights suffered by many victims of
community crime and tentatively highlight future policy
implications.
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