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This edited volume explores 21st century stories of hunting,
foraging, and fishing for food as unique forms of place-based
learning. Through the authors' narratives, it reveals complex
social and ecological relationships while readers sample the
flavors of foraging in Portland, Oregon; feel some of what it's
like to grow up hunting and gathering as a person of Oglala Lakota
and Shoshone-Bannock descent; track the immersive process of
learning to communicate with rocky mountain elk; encounter a
road-killed deer as a spontaneous source of local meat, and more.
Other topics in the collection connect place, food, and learning to
issues of identity, activism, spirituality, food movements,
conservation, traditional and elder knowledge, and the ethics
related to eating the more-than-human world. This volume will bring
lively discussion to courses on place-based learning, food studies,
environmental education, outdoor recreation, experiential
education, holistic learning, human dimensions of natural resource
management, sustainability, food systems, environmental ethics, and
others.
This timely book situates environmental education within and
against neoliberalism, the dominant economic, political, and
cultural ideology impacting both education and the environment.
Proponents of neoliberalism imagine and enact a world where the
primary role of the state is to promote capital markets, and where
citizens are defined as autonomous entrepreneurs who are to fulfill
their needs via competition with, and surveillance of, others.
These ideas interact with environmental issues in a number of ways
and Neoliberalism and Environmental Education engages this
interplay with chapters on how neoliberal ideas and actions shape
environmental education in formal, informal and community contexts.
International contributors consider these interactions in
agriculture and gardening, state policy enactments, environmental
science classrooms, ecoprisons, and in professional management and
educational accountability programs. The collection invites readers
to reexamine how economic policy and politics shape the cultural
enactment of environmental education. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Environmental Education Research.
Do recent moves in the construction industry towards collaborative
working and other new procurement procedures really make good
business sense? Procurement in the Construction Industry is the
result of research into this question and it includes the first
rigorous categorizing of the differences between procurement
methods currently in use. In the process of carrying out this
research, the team has produced a comprehensive study of
procurement methods which looks in detail at the relative benefits
and costs of different ways of working, with sometimes surprising
results. As such, it is not only a valuable guide for practitioners
on the complexities of the procurement process, but also an outline
of the relevance of economic theory to the construction sector.
This edited volume explores 21st century stories of hunting,
foraging, and fishing for food as unique forms of place-based
learning. Through the authors' narratives, it reveals complex
social and ecological relationships while readers sample the
flavors of foraging in Portland, Oregon; feel some of what it's
like to grow up hunting and gathering as a person of Oglala Lakota
and Shoshone-Bannock descent; track the immersive process of
learning to communicate with rocky mountain elk; encounter a
road-killed deer as a spontaneous source of local meat, and more.
Other topics in the collection connect place, food, and learning to
issues of identity, activism, spirituality, food movements,
conservation, traditional and elder knowledge, and the ethics
related to eating the more-than-human world. This volume will bring
lively discussion to courses on place-based learning, food studies,
environmental education, outdoor recreation, experiential
education, holistic learning, human dimensions of natural resource
management, sustainability, food systems, environmental ethics, and
others.
Quality management is essential for facilitating the
competitiveness of modern day commercial organisations. Excellence
in quality management is a requisite for construction organisations
who seek to remain competitive and successful. The challenges
presented by competitive construction markets and large projects
that are dynamic and complex necessitate the adoption and
application of quality management approaches. This new edition of
Construction Quality Management provides a comprehensive evaluation
of quality management systems and tools. Their effectiveness in
achieving project objectives is explored, as well as applications
in corporate performance enhancement. Both the strategic and
operational dimensions of quality assurance are addressed by
focusing on providing models of best practice. The reader is
supported throughout by concise and clear explanations and with
self-assessment questions. Practical case study examples show how
various evaluative-based quality management systems and tools have
been applied. Subjects covered include: business objectives - the
stakeholder satisfaction methodology organisational culture and
Health and Safety quality philosophy evaluation of organisational
performance continuous quality improvement and development of a
learning organisation. New chapters consider the influence of
Building Information Modelling (BIM) on quality management. The
text should be of interest to construction industry senior
managers, practicing professionals and academics. It is also an
essential resource for undergraduate and postgraduate students of
construction management, project management and business management
courses.
Do recent moves in the construction industry towards
collaborative working and other new procurement procedures really
make good business sense? Procurement in the Construction Industry
is the result of research into this question and it includes the
first rigorous categorizing of the differences between procurement
methods currently in use. In the process of carrying out this
research, the team has produced a comprehensive study of
procurement methods which looks in detail at the relative benefits
and costs of different ways of working, with sometimes surprising
results. As such, it is not only a valuable guide for practitioners
on the complexities of the procurement process, but also an outline
of the relevance of economic theory to the construction sector.
This timely book situates environmental education within and
against neoliberalism, the dominant economic, political, and
cultural ideology impacting both education and the environment.
Proponents of neoliberalism imagine and enact a world where the
primary role of the state is to promote capital markets, and where
citizens are defined as autonomous entrepreneurs who are to fulfill
their needs via competition with, and surveillance of, others.
These ideas interact with environmental issues in a number of ways
and Neoliberalism and Environmental Education engages this
interplay with chapters on how neoliberal ideas and actions shape
environmental education in formal, informal and community contexts.
International contributors consider these interactions in
agriculture and gardening, state policy enactments, environmental
science classrooms, ecoprisons, and in professional management and
educational accountability programs. The collection invites readers
to reexamine how economic policy and politics shape the cultural
enactment of environmental education. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Environmental Education Research.
Between 1935 and 1944 the field of microbiology, and by implication
medicine as a whole, underwent dramatic advancement. The discovery
of the extraordinary antibacterial properties of sulphonamides,
penicillin, and streptomycin triggered a frantic hunt for more
antimicrobial drugs that was to yield an abundant harvest in a very
short space of time. By the early 1960s more than 50 antibacterial
agents were available to the prescribing physician and, largely by
a process of chemical modification of existing compounds, that
number has more than tripled today. We have become so used to the
ready availability of these relatively safe and highly effective
'miracle drugs' that it is now hard to grasp how they transformed
the treatment of infection.
This book documents the progress made from the first tentative
search for an elusive 'chemotherapy' of infection in the early days
of the twentieth century, to the development of effective antiviral
agents for the management of HIV as the millennium drew to a close.
It also offers a celebration of the individuals and groups that
made this miracle happen, as well as examining the inexorable rise
of the global pharmaceutical industry, and, most intriguingly, the
essential input of luck.
Infection still maintains a high profile in both medicine and the
media, with the current threats of 'superbugs' such as MRSA
acquired in hospital, and a potential resistance to antibiotics.
This book tracks the history of antimicrobial drugs, a remarkable
medical triumph that has provided doctors with an amazing armoury
of safe and effective drugs that ensure that reversion to the
helpless state of the fight against infection witnessed in the
early 1900s isextremely unlikely. This timely compendium
acknowledges the agents that have surely led to the relief of more
human and animal suffering than any other class of drugs in the
history of medical endeavour.
Quality management is essential for facilitating the
competitiveness of modern day commercial organisations. Excellence
in quality management is a requisite for construction organisations
who seek to remain competitive and successful. The challenges
presented by competitive construction markets and large projects
that are dynamic and complex necessitate the adoption and
application of quality management approaches. This new edition of
Construction Quality Management provides a comprehensive evaluation
of quality management systems and tools. Their effectiveness in
achieving project objectives is explored, as well as applications
in corporate performance enhancement. Both the strategic and
operational dimensions of quality assurance are addressed by
focusing on providing models of best practice. The reader is
supported throughout by concise and clear explanations and with
self-assessment questions. Practical case study examples show how
various evaluative-based quality management systems and tools have
been applied. Subjects covered include: business objectives - the
stakeholder satisfaction methodology organisational culture and
Health and Safety quality philosophy evaluation of organisational
performance continuous quality improvement and development of a
learning organisation. New chapters consider the influence of
Building Information Modelling (BIM) on quality management. The
text should be of interest to construction industry senior
managers, practicing professionals and academics. It is also an
essential resource for undergraduate and postgraduate students of
construction management, project management and business management
courses.
Risk and Value Management, the fifth release in the Construction
Companion series, offers an introductory toolbox of techniques for
managing risk and value in construction projects for architects and
other building professionals. Risk and Value Management, the fifth
release in the Construction Companion series, offers an
introductory toolbox of techniques for managing risk and value in
construction projects for architects and other building
professionals. Identifying and assigning risk to deliver good value
has become an increasingly important objective as projects become
more complex and non-traditional procurement routes proliferate.
This book describes the social and psychological dimensions of risk
and value through a series of fascinating examples, whilst also
examining the dominant trend towards partnering and its specific
impact upon the assignment of risk and, consequently, upon value.
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