|
Showing 1 - 19 of
19 matches in All Departments
This book is part of a two volume set that examines prostitution
and sex trafficking on a global scale, with each chapter devoted to
a particular country in one of seven "geo-cultural" areas of the
world. The 18 chapters in this volume (Volume I) are devoted to
examination of the commercial sex industry (CSI) in countries
within Africa, Asia, Middle East, and Oceania, while the 16
chapters that comprise Volume II focus exclusively on Europe, Latin
America, and North America. Volume II also includes a "global"
section, which includes chapters that are globally relevant -
rather than those devoted to a particular country or geographic
location. The content of each volume, as well as each chapter,
reflects great diversity - diversity in focus, writing style, and
personal position regarding the commercial sex industry. Diversity
extends to the contributors, who are comprised of international
scholars, service providers, and policy advocates representing a
variety of fields and disciplines, with distinct and varied frames
of reference and theoretical underpinnings with regard to the
commercial sex industry. In addition to addressing aspects of the
CSI across the globe, as impacted by geography and culture, authors
have also provided a spectrum of implications of their work -
implications ranging from continued scholarship and research, to
legislative maneuvers and policy change, to suggestions for
collaboration across NGOS, fieldworkers, clinicians, and service
providers. Together, the 34 expertly-crafted chapters provide a
wealth of knowledge from which to more deeply appreciate and
contemplate the global commercial sex industry. By uniting
contributors from around the world, this book aims to build a
relatively common knowledge base on global prostitution and sex
trafficking.
This book is part of a two-volume set that examines prostitution
and sex trafficking on a global scale, with each chapter devoted to
a particular country in one of seven geo-cultural areas of the
world. The 16 chapters in this volume (Volume II) are devoted to
examination of the commercial sex industry (CSI) in countries
within Africa, Asia, Middle East, and Oceania, while the 18
chapters comprising Volume I focus exclusively on Europe, Latin
America, and North America. This volume also includes a "global"
section, which includes chapters that are globally relevant -
rather than those devoted to a particular country or geographic
location. The content of each Volume, as well as each chapter,
reflects great diversity - diversity in focus, writing style, and
personal position regarding the commercial sex industry. Diversity
extends to the contributors, who are comprised of international
scholars, service providers, and policy advocates representing a
variety of fields and disciplines, with distinct and varied frames
of reference and theoretical underpinnings with regard to the
commercial sex industry. In addition to addressing aspects of the
CSI across the globe, as impacted by geography and culture, authors
have also provided a spectrum of implications of their work -
implications ranging from continued scholarship and research, to
legislative maneuvers and policy change, to suggestions for
collaboration across NGOS, fieldworkers, clinicians, and service
providers. Together, the 34 expertly-crafted chapters provide a
wealth of knowledge from which to more deeply appreciate and
contemplate the global commercial sex industry. By uniting
contributors from around the world, this book aims to build a
relatively common knowledge base on global prostitution and sex
trafficking.
This book is part of a two volume set that examines prostitution
and sex trafficking on a global scale, with each chapter devoted to
a particular country in one of seven "geo-cultural" areas of the
world. The 18 chapters in this volume (Volume I) are devoted to
examination of the commercial sex industry (CSI) in countries
within Africa, Asia, Middle East, and Oceania, while the 16
chapters that comprise Volume II focus exclusively on Europe, Latin
America, and North America. Volume II also includes a "global"
section, which includes chapters that are globally relevant -
rather than those devoted to a particular country or geographic
location. The content of each volume, as well as each chapter,
reflects great diversity - diversity in focus, writing style, and
personal position regarding the commercial sex industry. Diversity
extends to the contributors, who are comprised of international
scholars, service providers, and policy advocates representing a
variety of fields and disciplines, with distinct and varied frames
of reference and theoretical underpinnings with regard to the
commercial sex industry. In addition to addressing aspects of the
CSI across the globe, as impacted by geography and culture, authors
have also provided a spectrum of implications of their work -
implications ranging from continued scholarship and research, to
legislative maneuvers and policy change, to suggestions for
collaboration across NGOS, fieldworkers, clinicians, and service
providers. Together, the 34 expertly-crafted chapters provide a
wealth of knowledge from which to more deeply appreciate and
contemplate the global commercial sex industry. By uniting
contributors from around the world, this book aims to build a
relatively common knowledge base on global prostitution and sex
trafficking.
The ancient Athenian legal system is both excitingly familiar
and disturbingly alien to the modern reader. It functions within a
democracy which shares many of our core values but operates in a
disconcertingly different way. Trials from Classical Athens
assembles a number of surviving speeches written for trials in
Athenian courts, dealing with themes which range from murder and
assault, through slander and sexual misconduct to property and
trade disputes and minor actions for damage. The texts illuminate
key aspects both of Athenian social and political life and the
functioning of the Athenian legal system.
This new and revised volume adds to the existing selection of
key forensic speeches with three new translations accompanied by
lucid explanatory notes. The introduction is augmented with a
section on Athenian democracy to make the book more accessible to
those unfamiliar with the Athenian political system. To aid
accessibility further a new glossary is included as well as
illustrations for the first time.
Providing a unique and guided introduction to the Athenian legal
system and explaining how the system reveals the values and social
life of Classical Athens, Trials from Classical Athens remains a
fundamental resource for students of Ancient Greek history and
anyone interested in the law, social history and oratory of the
Ancient Greek world.
This book is part of a two-volume set that examines prostitution
and sex trafficking on a global scale, with each chapter devoted to
a particular country in one of seven geo-cultural areas of the
world. The 16 chapters in this volume (Volume II) are devoted to
examination of the commercial sex industry (CSI) in countries
within Africa, Asia, Middle East, and Oceania, while the 18
chapters comprising Volume I focus exclusively on Europe, Latin
America, and North America. This volume also includes a "global"
section, which includes chapters that are globally relevant --
rather than those devoted to a particular country or geographic
location. The content of each Volume, as well as each chapter,
reflects great diversity -- diversity in focus, writing style, and
personal position regarding the commercial sex industry. Diversity
extends to the contributors, who are comprised of international
scholars, service providers, and policy advocates representing a
variety of fields and disciplines, with distinct and varied frames
of reference and theoretical underpinnings with regard to the
commercial sex industry. In addition to addressing aspects of the
CSI across the globe, as impacted by geography and culture, authors
have also provided a spectrum of implications of their work --
implications ranging from continued scholarship and research, to
legislative maneuvers and policy change, to suggestions for
collaboration across NGOS, fieldworkers, clinicians, and service
providers. Together, the 34 expertly-crafted chapters provide a
wealth of knowledge from which to more deeply appreciate and
contemplate the global commercial sex industry. By uniting
contributors from around the world, this book aims to build a
relatively common knowledge base on global prostitution and sex
trafficking. Viewed from a unified, global perspective, it is hoped
that this common understanding will lead to a grounded theory and
integrated view with applicable suggestions for international
efforts aimed at interventio
How successful were the Athenians and other Greeks in bringing
about the rule of law? What did the Greeks recognize as 'law' both
in the polis and internationally? How did the courts attempt to
implement this ideal, and how successful were they? This collection
of essays sets out to answer these questions, concentrating on the
following themes: law, religion and the sources of legitimacy;
substance and procedure; legal arguments in court; documents and
witnesses; and law in an international context. There is much here
to interest not only specialists in Greek law, but also those
concerned more generally with both Greek history and the history of
law.Contributors include: Christopher Carey, Angelos Chaniotis,
Michael Gagarin, Edward Harris, Adriaan Lanni, Frederick Naiden,
Robert Parker, Peter Rhodes, Lene Rubinstein, James Sickinger.
This edited volume brings together eighteen articles which examine
the role of eros as an emotion in ancient Greek culture. Arising
out of a conference held at University College London in 2009, the
volume ranges from Archaic epic and lyric poetry, through tragedy
and comedy, to philosophical and technical treatises and more, and
includes contributions from a variety of international scholars
well published in the field of ancient Greek emotions. Taking into
account all important thinking about the nature of eros from the
eighth century BCE to the third century CE, and covering a very
broad range of sources and theoretical approaches, both in the
chronological and the generic sense, it considers the
phenomenology, psychology, and physiology of eros; its associated
language, metaphors, and imagery; the overlap of eros with other
emotions (jealousy, madness, philia, pothos); its role in political
society; and the relationship between the human emotion and Eros
the god. These topics build on recent advances in the understanding
of ancient Greek homo- and heterosexual customs and practices,
visual and textual erotica, and philosophical approaches to eros as
manageable appetite or passion. However, the principal aim of the
volume is to apply to the study of eros the theoretical insights
offered by the rapidly expanding field of emotion studies, both in
ancient cultures and elsewhere in the humanities and social
sciences, thus maintaining throughout the focus on eros as emotion.
One of the canonical Athenian orators, Lysias was much admired in
antiquity. This new critical edition seeks to make the whole
surviving corpus of Lysias available to the modern reader. It
combines a newly edited text of the speeches preserved in the
medieval manuscript tradition (based on the most up-to-date
evaluation of the transmission) with a comprehensive collection of
the fragments preserved indirectly through citation in ancient
sources and in papyrus discoveries in the twentieth century. A
general introduction in English provides an overview of the
transmission of the text in antiquity and the Renaissance. An
appendix contains a number of speeches almost certainly not written
by Lysias but occasionally attributed to him in modern times.
The ancient Athenian legal system is both excitingly familiar
and disturbingly alien to the modern reader. It functions within a
democracy which shares many of our core values but operates in a
disconcertingly different way. Trials from Classical Athens
assembles a number of surviving speeches written for trials in
Athenian courts, dealing with themes which range from murder and
assault, through slander and sexual misconduct to property and
trade disputes and minor actions for damage. The texts illuminate
key aspects both of Athenian social and political life and the
functioning of the Athenian legal system.
This new and revised volume adds to the existing selection of
key forensic speeches with three new translations accompanied by
lucid explanatory notes. The introduction is augmented with a
section on Athenian democracy to make the book more accessible to
those unfamiliar with the Athenian political system. To aid
accessibility further a new glossary is included as well as
illustrations for the first time.
Providing a unique and guided introduction to the Athenian legal
system and explaining how the system reveals the values and social
life of Classical Athens, Trials from Classical Athens remains a
fundamental resource for students of Ancient Greek history and
anyone interested in the law, social history and oratory of the
Ancient Greek world.
For two centuries classical Athens enjoyed almost uninterrupted
democratic government. This was not a parliamentary democracy of
the modern sort but a direct democracy in which all citizens were
free to participate in the business of government. Throughout this
period Athens was the cultural centre of Greece and one of the
major Greek powers. This book traces the development and operation
of the political system and explores its underlying principles.
Christopher Carey assesses the ancient sources of the history of
Athenian democracy and evaluates criticisms of the system, ancient
and modern. He also provides a virtual tour of the political
cityscape of ancient Athens, describing the main political sites
and structures, including the theatre. With a new chapter covering
religion in the democratic city, this second edition benefits from
updates throughout that incorporate the latest research and recent
archaeological findings in Athens. A clearer structure and layout
make the book more accessible to students, as do extra images and
maps along with a timeline of key events.
The Greek prose writer Lysias is a fascinating source for the study
of Athenian law, society and history in the late fifth century BC.
Six of his professional legal speeches are selected in this new
edition, both for their intrinsic interest and because the language
is accessible even to the comparative beginner. In his introduction
Dr Carey discusses Lysias' life and place in the evolution of Greek
prose style, and the development of Greek rhetoric. He approaches
the speeches in terms of their function, as attempts to secure a
verdict favourable to the speaker, and assesses how effectively the
selection and deployment of arguments promote this end. In the
commentary he addresses problems of Lysias' style and syntax, and
textual issues where necessary, but the particular focus is always
literary: Lysias' use of rhetorical devices, his marshalling of
fact and argument and his manipulation of contemporary values and
prejudices are examined in detail. These speeches are invaluable
historical documents and will be of interest to students of ancient
history and civilisation, as well as classicists.
|
Spot Lit (Paperback)
Steven Christopher Carey, Elizabeth Fenimore, Eileen Aronson Ireland
|
R174
Discovery Miles 1 740
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
You may like...
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R165
R138
Discovery Miles 1 380
|