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This ambitious interdisciplinary volume places population processes
in their social, political, and economic contexts while it
considers their environmental impacts. Examining the multi-faceted
patterns of human relationships that overlay, alter, and distort
our ties to urban and rural landscapes, the book focuses especially
on the essential experi
This ambitious interdisciplinary volume places population processes
in their social, political, and economic contexts while it
considers their environmental impacts.Examining the multi-faceted
patterns of human relationships the book focuses especially on the
essential experiences and perspectives of poor.
Many people see American cities as a radical departure in the
history of town planning because of their planned nature based on
the geometrical division of the land. However, other cities of the
world also began as planned towns with geometric layouts so
American cities are not unique. Why did the regular grid come to so
pervasively characterize American urbanism? Are American cities
really so different? The Syntax of City Space: American Urban Grids
by Mark David Major with Foreword by Ruth Conroy Dalton (co-editor
of Take One Building) answers these questions and much more by
exploring the urban morphology of American cities. It argues
American cities do represent a radical departure in the history of
town planning while, simultaneously, still being subject to the
same processes linking the street network and function found in
other types of cities around the world. A historical preference for
regularity in town planning had a profound influence on American
urbanism, which endures to this day.
Managing climate variability and change remains a key development
and food security issue in Bangladesh. Despite significant
investments, floods, droughts, and cyclones during the last two
decades continue to cause extensive economic damage and impair
livelihoods. Climate change will pose additional risks to ongoing
efforts to reduce poverty. This book examines the implications of
climate change on food security in Bangladesh and identifies
adaptation measures in the agriculture sector using a comprehensive
integrated framework. First, the most recent science available is
used to characterize current climate and hydrology and its
potential changes. Second, country-specific survey and biophysical
data is used to derive more realistic and accurate agricultural
impact functions and simulations. A range of climate risks (i.e.
warmer temperatures, higher carbon dioxide concentrations, changing
characteristics of floods, droughts and potential sea level rise)
is considered to gain a more complete picture of potential
agriculture impacts. Third, while estimating changes in production
is important, economic responses may to some degree buffer against
the physical losses predicted, and an assessment is made of these.
Food security is dependent not only on production, but also future
food requirements, income levels and commodity prices. Finally,
adaptation possibilities are identified for the sector. This book
is the first to combine these multiple disciplines and analytical
procedures to comprehensively address these impacts. The framework
will serve as a useful guide to design policy intervention
strategies and investments in adaptation measures.
Many people see American cities as a radical departure in the
history of town planning because of their planned nature based on
the geometrical division of the land. However, other cities of the
world also began as planned towns with geometric layouts so
American cities are not unique. Why did the regular grid come to so
pervasively characterize American urbanism? Are American cities
really so different? The Syntax of City Space: American Urban Grids
by Mark David Major with Foreword by Ruth Conroy Dalton (co-editor
of Take One Building) answers these questions and much more by
exploring the urban morphology of American cities. It argues
American cities do represent a radical departure in the history of
town planning while, simultaneously, still being subject to the
same processes linking the street network and function found in
other types of cities around the world. A historical preference for
regularity in town planning had a profound influence on American
urbanism, which endures to this day.
In a time when most churches emphasize relational issues over
solid, biblical teaching, J. David Majors draws on years of study
and communicating with people to present theology to regular people
in plain language. In Learning About God, the reader will explore
questions such as: "Is there any significance to the different
names of God in the Bible?" "What are attributes of God and what
does it mean to me?" "Is the doctrine of the Trinity in the Bible?"
"What is the Kingdom of God?" "Why does God allow evil?" "What is
God's plan for the world?" "Is there a difference between the
Christian God and the gods of other religions?" "How do I respond
to God?"
Always, the past endures... Twenty years ago, Mark David Major
(author of Mars Rising) wrote three plays in a burst of creative
activity over a three-year period. The first of these plays, The
Persistence of Memory, premiered during a short, successful run at
a historic St. Louis area theatre in May 1992. Twenty years later,
the author revisited and updated these plays so they could be
discovered by a new generation of readers and patrons of the
theatre in The Persistence of Memory and Other Plays. This
large-text format edition of The Truth of Glances, including
character studies and playwright's commentary, is specifically
designed for actors, directors, and theatre companies. The plays of
Mark David Major perfectly embody the didactic nature of Generation
X at its best and worst on the themes of romantic love and
emotional honesty. It is characterized by a purity of perspective
tinted with a cynicism wise beyond its years and a raw emotionalism
carefully veiled under a mask of social indifference. These plays
give voice to an entire generation, the children of a revolution...
Everyday Objects is the definitive collection of the poems written
by Mark David Major (author of Mars Rising and The Persistence of
Memory and Other Plays) over a 25-year period from 1987 to 2012.
The book brings together many previously published poems including
beloved ones such as "Pale Bloom" and "Empty Words" and more
provocative offerings like "God's Feast" and "Purchased Inertia."
Everyday Objects collects these together with a number of
never-before-seen poems representing underground experiments in
free verse, extended haiku structures, and what the author
describes as "antithesis poetry," whereby a new poem or additional
stanzas are composed using antonyms, contrasting terms, phrases
and/or clauses to generate a (sometimes radically) different
interpretation on the subject. Everyday Objects represents a poet
at the height of his powers in crafting language to create new
meanings and poetic interpretations.
Always, the past endures... Twenty years ago, Mark David Major
(author of Mars Rising) wrote three plays in a burst of creative
activity over a three-year period. The first of these plays, The
Persistence of Memory, premiered during a short, successful run at
a historic St. Louis area theatre in May 1992. Twenty years later,
the author revisited and updated these plays so they could be
discovered by a new generation of readers and patrons of the
theatre in The Persistence of Memory and Other Plays. This
large-text format edition of Song of My Childhood, including
character studies and playwright's commentary, is specifically
designed for actors, directors, and theatre companies. The plays of
Mark David Major perfectly embody the didactic nature of Generation
X at its best and worst on the themes of romantic love and
emotional honesty. It is characterized by a purity of perspective
tinted with a cynicism wise beyond its years and a raw emotionalism
carefully veiled under a mask of social indifference. These plays
give voice to an entire generation, the children of a revolution...
Clarity of outline, conciseness, and formal beauty are excellent
things in musical works, but an exquisite fancy, a noble
imagination, and a lofty poetic spirit are of infinitely greater
account; and no one ever possessed these inestimable gifts in
richer profusion than Franz Schubert. This new edition of Henry
Frost's 1892 biography of Franz Schubert has been edited and
revised. The original references to pieces by Opus number have been
replaced with the more commonly used D numbers. Many illustrations
of places and people have been added throughout the text, and a
complete catalog of Schubert's works has been included. "With faith
man steps forth into the world. Faith is far ahead of understanding
and knowledge; for to understand anything, I must first of all
believe something. Faith is the higher basis on which weak
understanding rears its first columns of proof; reason is nothing
but faith analysed." - Franz Schubert
An Infinitesimal Abundance of Color, written by Mark David Major
and beautifully illustrated by Layce Boswell, tells the simple
story of a father answering his daughter's questions at bedtime.
"Our agriculture is wrongly based. It is a system largely directed
at curing evils which it itself is responsible for. It is the
wisdom of the country and the traditional farmers we need now; the
wisdom of those who have built up long-lasting agriculture and
whose wisdom lies in tradition. They have fashioned it through
physical work and close and immediate observation; through the
personal intimacy with nature which we have come to associate with
the poet. In fact, peasant life is poetic, and it is so precisely
because of this intimacy. The music, dance and art of peasants are
the creative expression of their lives, and as such are
characteristic of their environments and the land on which they
live. Nothing collective or traditional, as peasant life is,
originates from people separated from the soil, as are townfolk.
The poems and essays that played a notable part in the country life
of the Chinese, the Tibetan art which finds its way into every
home, the sylvan setting of Japanese villages, of the Balinese and
Burmese, the vocal harmony of Swiss peasants returning from their
fields, the reproduction of floral beauty and colour in festive
dress of so many countries; these are the product of the poet that
lies in every peasant's heart. It is this intimacy that inspires
creativity in the poet, as the Greeks recognized in their choice of
word for poet, namely, a 'maker' or creator, and which Dante voiced
in the Divine Comedy, when he wrote that the poet was not the
disciple of the imagination, but rather one who knows the secrets
of nature." - Guy Wrench Dr Wrench takes us on a wide-ranging
journey through the history of some of the world's most important
civilizations, concentrating on the relationship between humanity
and the soil. He shows the reader how farming practices, and the
care - or lack of care - with which the soil is treated have
brought about both the rise and fall of civilizations, from the
ancient Romans, to the Chinese, and the Muslim world. This is a
fully re-edited version of this classic and fundamentally important
text.
Title: Sketches of the character, manners, and present state of the
Highlanders of Scotland: with details of the Military Service of
the Highland Regiments.Publisher: British Library, Historical Print
EditionsThe British Library is the national library of the United
Kingdom. It is one of the world's largest research libraries
holding over 150 million items in all known languages and formats:
books, journals, newspapers, sound recordings, patents, maps,
stamps, prints and much more. Its collections include around 14
million books, along with substantial additional collections of
manuscripts and historical items dating back as far as 300 BC.The
GEOGRAPHY & TOPOGRAPHY collection includes books from the
British Library digitised by Microsoft. Offering some insights into
the study and mapping of the natural world, this collection
includes texts on Babylon, the geographies of China, and the
medieval Islamic world. Also included are regional geographies and
volumes on environmental determinism, topographical analyses of
England, China, ancient Jerusalem, and significant tracts of North
America. ++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure
edition identification: ++++ British Library Stewart, David
Major-General.; M., A.; 1885. xv. 396 p.; 8 . 10370.bb.43.
Always, the past endures... Twenty years ago, Mark David Major
(author of Mars Rising) wrote three plays in a burst of creative
activity over a three-year period. The first of these plays, The
Persistence of Memory, premiered during a short, successful run at
a historic St. Louis area theatre in May 1992. Twenty years later,
the author revisited and updated these plays so they could be
discovered by a new generation of readers and patrons of the
theatre in The Persistence of Memory and Other Plays. This
large-text format edition of The Persistence of Memory including
character studies and a playwright's commentary is specifically
designed for actors, directors, and theatre companies. The plays of
Mark David Major perfectly embody the didactic nature of Generation
X at its best and worst on the themes of romantic love and
emotional honesty. It is characterized by a purity of perspective
tinted with a cynicism wise beyond its years and a raw emotionalism
carefully veiled under a mask of social indifference. These plays
give voice to an entire generation, the children of a revolution...
Consider the world that would exist if the best of the New Age
theories were true. All the hippy, pseudo-nazi new-ageisms like the
ascension, 12-strand DNA, the photon belt and the three days of
darkness... imagine that they're all for real, and not just an
excuse to fill the shelves of those irritating shops that have
crystals and those feather dreamcatcher things in the window and
smell of cheap incense. And imagine if those scrappy little pieces
of quartz really did have all those properties? The implacable New
Age... no matter how much common sense you throw at it, it just
keeps coming... We can't forget conspiracy theories, of course.
There really are Nazis on the Moon and at the South Pole. How could
there not be? Plus the one-world government, the secret prison
camps, Mount Weather, black helicopters and the deals with the
aliens... Oh, the aliens... the Nefilim are around, and everyone
from Sitchin to the Secretary-General of the UN knows that. There's
Marduk (their home planet), the genetic manipulation of humanity,
and the mutants that have survived underground for millennia... the
Earth is riddled with underground catacombs. There's a whole world
down there, populated with the detritus of the genetic program with
which the Nefilim created humanity. The Nefilim are not only very
much alive and well and waiting for their home planet to approach
Earth, but the UN, that august body charged with the betterment of
world peace and human rights while paradoxically being comprised of
the world's governments and led by the planet's leading
arms-producing nations, has got other ideas - "Let's use the threat
of an alien invasion to justify the imposition of total control,
and we can finally use all the wonderful measures we've been
quietly cooking up for years." (There's an idea that would just
have to be fiction.) ... but you get the idea. How can so much
stuff be true and life go on as normal?
Shaping the Tools aims to equip the reader with the skills they
need to do theological study through use of personal experience as
a starting point for theological reflection..
Managing climate variability and change remains a key development
and food security issue in Bangladesh. Despite significant
investments, floods, droughts, and cyclones during the last two
decades continue to cause extensive economic damage and impair
livelihoods. Climate change will pose additional risks to ongoing
efforts to reduce poverty. This book examines the implications of
climate change on food security in Bangladesh and identifies
adaptation measures in the agriculture sector using a comprehensive
integrated framework. First, the most recent science available is
used to characterize current climate and hydrology and its
potential changes. Second, country-specific survey and biophysical
data is used to derive more realistic and accurate agricultural
impact functions and simulations. A range of climate risks (i.e.
warmer temperatures, higher carbon dioxide concentrations, changing
characteristics of floods, droughts and potential sea level rise)
is considered to gain a more complete picture of potential
agriculture impacts. Third, while estimating changes in production
is important, economic responses may to some degree buffer against
the physical losses predicted, and an assessment is made of these.
Food security is dependent not only on production, but also future
food requirements, income levels and commodity prices. Finally,
adaptation possibilities are identified for the sector. This book
is the first to combine these multiple disciplines and analytical
procedures to comprehensively address these impacts. The framework
will serve as a useful guide to design policy intervention
strategies and investments in adaptation measures.
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