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422 matches in All Departments
Today's human resource departments play a vital role in helping organizations achieve their strategic objectives and gain a competitive edge. As technology continues to evolve at a rapid pace, it's imperative that organizations leverage human resource information systems (HRIS) to make better people decisions and manage talent more effectively.
Human Resource Information Systems: Basics, Applications, and Future Directions is a thorough, accessible introduction to the HRIS field. The Fourth Edition includes a new chapter on social media, exploring how organizations can use social networks to recruit and select the best candidates.
A new HRIS Expert feature spotlights practitioners who share best practices and insights into HR professions.
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Vegetable Souffle (Hardcover)
Michaela R. Johnson; Contributions by Barbara A Johnson, Tucker D Johnson
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R496
Discovery Miles 4 960
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Evidence-based medicine is a concept that has come to the fore in
the past few years. Clinicians are increasingly encouraged to
practise patient management based on available evidence in the
scientific literature. For example, new pharmacological therapies
are only used when large randomized trials have 'proven' that a
particular drug is better than existing ones. This is also the case
in surgical specialties, although surgery has traditionally seen a
lack of use of this information, with individual surgeon's
preferences being most influential in treatment choices. However,
more recently, there has been a large expansion of trials and
studies aimed at providing surgeons with information to guide their
choices using firm evidence. This new edition has been revised and
expanded to include new data where relevant, and also features a
new chapter on pituitary surgery. Landmark Papers in Neurosurgery,
Second Edition, remains a key collection of the most important
trials and studies in neurosurgery, allowing the reader to rapidly
extract key results, and making it essential reading for all
neurosurgeons and trainees in the field.
In The Power of Mammon, Curtis D. Johnson describes how the market
economy and market-related forces, such as the media, politics,
individualism, and consumerism, radically changed the nature of
Baptist congregational life in New York State during three
centuries. Collectively, these forces emphasized the importance of
material wealth over everything else, and these values penetrated
the thinking of Baptist ministers and laypeople alike. Beginning in
the 1820s, the pastorate turned into a profession, the laity's
influence diminished, closeknit religious fellowships evolved into
voluntary associations, and evangelism became far less effective.
Men, being the most engaged in the market, secularized the more
quickly and became less involved in church affairs. By the 1870s,
male disengagement opened the door to increased female
participation in church governance. While scientific advances and
religious pluralism also played a role, the market and its related
distractions were the primary forces behind the secularization of
Baptist life. The Power of Mammon is history from the ground up.
Unlike many denominational histories, this book emphasizes
congregational life and the importance of the laity. This focus
allows the reader to hear the voices of ordinary Baptists who
argued over a host of issues. Johnson deftly connects large social
trends with exhaustive attention to archival material, including
numerous well-chosen records preserved by forty-two New York
churches. These records include details related to membership,
discipline, finance, and institutional history. Utilizing
statistical analysis to achieve even greater clarity, Johnson
effectively bridges the gap between the particularity of church
records and the broader history of New York's Baptist churches.
Johnson's narrative of Baptist history in New York will serve as a
model for other regional studies and adds to our understanding of
secularization and its impact on American religion.
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Song of Songs (Hardcover)
Jeffrey D. Johnson; Foreword by William G Bjork
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R806
R700
Discovery Miles 7 000
Save R106 (13%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This book is open access and available on
www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by Knowledge Unlatched.
This innovative collection of essays on twenty-first century
Chinese cinema and moving image culture features contributions from
an international community of scholars, critics, and practitioners.
Taken together, their perspectives make a compelling case that the
past decade has witnessed a radical transformation of conventional
notions of cinema. Following China's accession to the WTO in 2001,
personal and collective experiences of changing social conditions
have added new dimensions to the increasingly diverse Sinophone
media landscape, and provided a novel complement to the existing
edifice of blockbusters, documentaries, and auteur culture. The
numerous 'iGeneration' productions and practices examined in this
volume include 3D and IMAX films, experimental documentaries,
animation, visual aides-memoires, and works of pirated pastiche.
Together, they bear witness to the emergence of a new Chinese
cinema characterized by digital and, trans-media representational
strategies, the blurring of private/public distinctions, and
dynamic reinterpretations of the very notion of 'cinema' itself.
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Arnold of Brescia (Hardcover)
Phillip D. Johnson; Foreword by Paul R. Sponheim
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R1,022
R865
Discovery Miles 8 650
Save R157 (15%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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There's a cage. One made of pure Darkness. It exists inside us all.
We control what goes into this Dark Prison, but not what comes out.
For years, we've stuffed into this steel void parts of ourselves we
don't like, horrible things others have done to us, unacceptable
things we have done. For years, these things have been despised.
People fail to realize the raw power within these neglected parts.
They're alive and they're angry. We, as the Sciell, can now see
them. We feel the power. In exchange for magnificent strength, we
give them what all prisoners wish for-escape...and revenge.
(Mascenore Tahylur's journal) This knowledge is lost to the
residents of Raesul- a village for non-human beings. It was built
on secrets- created under a barrier well away from the human world.
Raesul is a prison. Those that rule only want to control the
residents. The villagers don't know what they really are. Maybe
Raesul's destruction will let the Del'Praeli see their true selves.
The prison walls are coming down. Darkness is changing. The world
will suffer.
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