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There is significant debate regarding the quality of the national
health system of the United States relative to those of other
countries. The U.S. healthcare system has been heavily criticized
as a highly inefficient, disorganized, fragmented, and
under-resourced primary care system that contributes to high
healthcare costs, high rates of uninsured individuals, and a number
of health problems in comparison to the situation in other Western
nations. Further, the United States is currently the only wealthy
industrialized country that has not achieved universal health
coverage. Together, these reasons help explain why important health
indicators have been deteriorating recently. Assessing the Need for
a Comprehensive National Health System in the United States seeks
to thoroughly examine several key aspects related to the U.S.
health system and presents different perspectives, provides facts
and data-based assessment, and offers alternative strategies,
policies, and realistic options towards a better and healthier U.S.
society. Covering key topics such as telehealth, social justice,
and healthcare workers, this reference work is ideal for health
professionals, nurses, government officials, policymakers,
researchers, scholars, practitioners, instructors, and students.
How Would You Survive As A...? is a brand new nature strand in the
globally bestselling You Wouldn't Want To... brand, looking at the
struggles for survival of different animal species. Each volume
follows a first-person narrative approach, telling the story of an
example of the species as they deal with finding food, reproducing,
raising their young, exploring their territory and fighting for
dominance. The mix of humorous illustrations, bite-sized text and
fact panels provides multiple entry points for reluctant readers,
presenting the information accessibly. How Would You Survive As A
Bee? explores the challenges faced by a bee as it gathers pollen,
communicates with its fellow workers, and repairs and defends its
hive. The end matter contains real life stories of beehives and bee
populations, highlighting conservation issues surrounding the
species, illustrated with photographs to underscore that they're
non-fiction and drawn from reality, plus family trees of related
species and a quiz.
Jeremy Brand, professor of popular culture at Calloway State
University, becomes involved in solving a double murder with the
help of his good friend Harriet Strong, chief of police. Brand, a
nationally-known wine expert, shares with the chief an interest in
wine, and they meet once or twice a week to share a bottle of wine
and talk about wine-related things.
Wine talk changes to a discussion of criminal activity when a
request for help with a colleague's tenure case escalates into an
investigation of academic fraud, blackmail, arson and murder.
When Brand begins looking into the first murder, he discovers
the dean's secret notes about the faculty in hidden files in his
computer. Knowledge of these secrets turns out to be explosive in
more sense than one. The identification of the murderer takes place
at a wine tasting, proving once again the truth of the saying, in
vino veritas.
The province of Roussillon was acquired by France in 1659, just as
Louis XIV reached his majority. The region was peopled by Catalans,
a group with their own language, religious values, political
traditions, and cultural patterns. Louis XIV and his ministers
sought to accomplish two goals in the province. First they wanted
to compel the Roussillonnais to accept French political supremacy
as legitimate, and second they desired to eradicate the Catalan
cultural identity in the province. This study examines the means by
which the French chose to pursue their goals, and the methods of
resistance employed by the inhabitants of Roussillon. It concludes
with an examination of why the French ultimately failed to
acculturate the province despite their success in asserting their
political authority.
For the first time in history, everyone - Third World freedom
fighters to urban drug dealers - can communicate in secrecy via
unbreakable codes made available by advances in cryptography and
computer technology. As the welcome and unwelcome consequences of
this new technology begin to dawn on governments worldwide,
responses have varied from stringent regulation to laissez faire
liberalism. Written by a former General Counsel of the National
Security Agency and an expert in cryptography law, this text
explores the policy and legal issues raised by the democratization
of cryptography and offers a guide to the ways in which the law of
cryptography translates issues of trust into standards for lawful
conduct. The book addresses the international regulation of
cryptography and digital signatures both in terms of
confidentiality (cryptography used to keep secrets) and
authentication (cryptography used to verify information). Coverage
includes: a description of over 45 countries' policies and laws on
cryptography import, export, and domestic controls and digital
signature initiatives worldwide; a concise history of the
cryptography debate in the United States from its beginnings after
World War II to the recent debates over the Clipper Chip and key
recovery encryption; and a presentation of the efforts of the
United States government (and others) to build a new national
consensus on regulation of encryption.
How Would You Survive As A...? is a brand new nature strand in the
globally bestselling You Wouldn't Want To... brand, looking at the
struggles for survival of different animal species. Each volume
follows a first-person narrative approach, telling the story of an
example of the species as they deal with finding food, reproducing,
raising their young, exploring their territory and fighting for
dominance. The mix of humorous illustrations, bite-sized text, fact
panels and diagrams provides multiple entry points for reluctant
readers, presenting the information in a fun and accessible manner.
How Would You Survive As A Lion? explores the challenges faced by a
lioness as she hunts prey, fends off other predators, like packs of
hyenas, and protects her cubs in the harsh African savanna. The end
matter contains real life stories of lions, highlighting
conservation issues surrounding the species, illustrated with
photographs to underscore that they're non-fiction and drawn from
the real world, plus family trees of related species, a quiz and
statistics.
The proclamation by the United Nations that 2012 would be the
International Year of Co-operatives represents a milestone in the
history of the international co-operative movement. It reflects the
growth and renewal of co-operatives globally during the past decade
and a half, whether the focus is on financial co-operatives in
Britain or producer co-operatives across Africa. Co-operatives have
proved resilient in the wake of the global financial crisis of
2008-9 compared to the investor led business and financial
companies which have been found profoundly wanting, financially and
morally. The contributions to The Hidden Alternative demonstrate
that co-operation offers a real and much needed alternative for the
organisation of human economic and social affairs, one that should
establish its place at the forefront of public and academic
discussion and policy making. The book includes chapters on
education, fair trade, politics and governance, planning and
sustainability and on how co-operatives have coped with the global
economic crisis. -- .
This book introduces students to the art and craft of writing
proofs, beginning with the basics of writing proofs and logic, and
continuing on with more in-depth issues and examples of creating
proofs in different parts of mathematics, as well as introducing
proofs-of-correctness for algorithms. The creation of proofs is
covered for theorems in both discrete and continuous mathematics,
and in difficulty ranging from elementary to beginning graduate
level.Just beyond the standard introductory courses on calculus,
theorems and proofs become central to mathematics. Students often
find this emphasis difficult and new. This book is a guide to
understanding and creating proofs. It explains the standard "moves"
in mathematical proofs: direct computation, expanding definitions,
proof by contradiction, proof by induction, as well as choosing
notation and strategies.
This book introduces students to the art and craft of writing
proofs, beginning with the basics of writing proofs and logic, and
continuing on with more in-depth issues and examples of creating
proofs in different parts of mathematics, as well as introducing
proofs-of-correctness for algorithms. The creation of proofs is
covered for theorems in both discrete and continuous mathematics,
and in difficulty ranging from elementary to beginning graduate
level.Just beyond the standard introductory courses on calculus,
theorems and proofs become central to mathematics. Students often
find this emphasis difficult and new. This book is a guide to
understanding and creating proofs. It explains the standard "moves"
in mathematical proofs: direct computation, expanding definitions,
proof by contradiction, proof by induction, as well as choosing
notation and strategies.
How Would You Survive As A...? is a brand new nature strand in the
globally bestselling You Wouldn't Want To... brand, looking at the
struggles for survival of different animal species. Each volume
follows a first-person narrative approach, telling the story of an
example of the species as they deal with finding food, reproducing,
raising their young, exploring their territory and fighting for
dominance. The mix of humorous illustrations, bite-sized text, fact
panels and diagrams provides multiple entry points for reluctant
readers, presenting the information in a fun and accessible manner.
How Would You Survive As A Polar Bear? explores the challenges
faced by a female polar bear as she hunts in the inhospitable
Arctic region and raises her young cubs. The endmatter contains
real life stories of polar bears highlighting conservation issues
surrounding the species, illustrated with photographs to underscore
that they're non-fiction and drawn from the real world, plus family
trees of related species, a quiz and statistics.
The 1820s and 1830s, the gap between Romanticism and Victorianism,
continues to prove a difficulty for scholars. This book explores
and recovers a neglected culture of poetry in those years, and it
demonstrates that culture was a crucial turning point in literary
history. It explores a uniquely wide range of poets, including the
poetry of the literary annuals, Letitia Landon, Felicia Hemans,
Robert Browning, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Thomas Hood and John
Clare, placing their work in the light of new research into the
conditions of the literary market. In turn, it uses that culture to
open up wider theoretical issues relating to literary form, book
history, print culture, gender and periodisation. The period's
doubt about poetry's place in culture and its capacity to last
prompted a dazzling range of creative experiments that reimagined
the metrical, material and commercial forms of poetry.
Exploring the Philosophy of Religion, 7th Edition, combines the
best features of a text and a reader by offering clear analysis
coupled with important primary-source readings. Professor David
Stewart called upon his 30-plus years of teaching experience to
introduce students to the important study of philosophical issues
raised by religion. Beginning students often find primary sources
alone too difficult so this text offers primary source materials by
a variety of significant philosophers including a balanced blend of
classical and contemporary authors but the materials are supported
by clearly written introductions, which better prepare students to
understand the readings.
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