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For over two thousand years, civilization has failed to live up to
the expectations expounded by the Christian religion. The last
century alone saw two world wars, a cold war, and numerous other
politically and racially motivated conflicts. Where was
Christianity amidst all that turmoil? It was also believed that the
end of colonial rule in Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean would usher
in an era of peace and prosperity, but the result has been decades
of civil war, genocide, and corruption in those regions. Author
S.N. Duru theorizes that the cause of this leap-frogging from
crisis to crisis is that society has allowed culture to take
precedence over faith and reason. When Culture Overrules God and
Reason addresses the issues that form the foundation of Duru's
theory, and provides a workable resolution for the nations of the
world. It is an impassioned call to action to correct
civilization's current state of being.
Econometrics of Health Care - which we have sometimes called
'medico metrics' - is a field in full expansion. The reasons are
numerous: our knowl edge of quantitative relations in the field of
health econometrics is far from being perfect, a large number of
analytical difficulties - combining medical (latent factors, e. g.
) and economic facts (spatial behaviour, e. g. ) are faced by the
research worker, medical and pharmaceutical techniques change
rapidly, medical costs rocket more than proportionally with
available resources, of being tightened. medical budgets are in the
process So it is not surprising that the practice of
'hygieconometrics' - to produce a neologism - is more and more
included in the programmes of econometri cians. The Applied
Econometrics Association has devoted to the topic two symposia in
less than three years (Lyons, February 1983; Rotterdam, December
1985), without experiencing any difficulties in getting valuable
papers: on econometrics of risks and medical insurance, on the
measurement of health status and of efficiency of medical
techniques, on general models allowing simulation. These were the
themes for the second meeting, but other aspects of
medical-economic problems had presented themselves already to the
analyst: medical decision making and its consequences, the
behaviour of the actors - patients and physicians -, regional
medicometrics and what not: some of them have been covered by the
first meeting. Finally, in July 1988 took place in Lyons the Fourth
International Conference on System Science in Health Care; it
should not be astonishing ."
This volume comprehensively focuses on polycystic ovary, metabolic
syndrome and obesity and their impact on women's health,
reproduction and quality of life from adolescence to old age. PCOS
is analyzed form the early origins - highlighting the importance of
diagnosis, management and treatment starting from the high-risk
period of adolescence - throughout infertility PCOS-related issues,
pregnancy and menopause transition. All aspects of this syndrome
are covered also in relation with endocrine and metabolic features
that affects women's health. This book is a very useful tool for
gynecologists, endocrinologists, obstetricians, reproductive
medicine and general practitioners and is an important resource for
all physicians involved in women's health.
Successful sports agents are comfortable with high finance and
intense competition for the right to represent talented players,
and the most respected agents are those who can deal with the
pressures of high-stakes negotiations in an honest fashion. But
whereas rules and penalties govern the playing field, there are far
fewer restrictions on agents. In The Business of Sports Agents,
Kenneth L. Shropshire, Timothy Davis, and N. Jeremi Duru, experts
in the fields of sports business and law, examine the history of
the sports agent business and the rules and laws developed to
regulate the profession. They also consider recommendations for
reform, including uniform laws that would apply to all agents,
redefining amateurism in college sports, and stiffening
requirements for licensing agents. This revised and expanded third
edition brings the volume up to date on recent changes in the
industry, including: -the emergence and dominance of companies such
as Creative Artists Agency and Wasserman Media Group -high-profile
cases of agent misconduct, principally Josh Luchs, whose agent
certification was revoked by the NFLPA -legal challenges against
the NCAA that may fundamentally change the definition of amateurism
-changes to agent regulations resulting from new collective
bargaining agreements in all of the major professional sports
-evaluation of the effectiveness of the Uniform Athlete Agents Act
(2000) to regulate agent conduct -issues faced by the increasing
number of agents representing athletes who work abroad as well as
athletes from abroad who work in the United States. Whether
aspiring sports agent, lawyer, athlete seeking an agent, or simply
interested in understanding the world of sports representation, the
reader will find in The Business of Sports Agents the most
comprehensive overview of the industry as well as a straightforward
analysis of its problems and proposed solutions.
Accurate assessment of hand function is critical to any treatment
regimen of the hand compromised patient. Hand Function is a
practical, clinical book which provides the knowledge needed to
distinguish the different dimensions of hand function, particularly
impairment, disability and handicap. Beginning with an overview of
basic principles and examination, subsequent chapters evaluate the
hand function in specific afflicted populations, including the
rheumatoid patient, the stroke patient, the trauma patient, the
geriatric patient and the pediatric patient, as well as special
populations such as diabetes mellitus patients and musicians. An
appendix containing hand function scales essential to the
assessment of disability is also included. Rheumatologists,
physiatrists, hand surgeons, orthopedists, occupational therapists
and physical therapists will all find Hand Function a useful and
valuable addition to their clinical references.
Some scholars argue that education systems across the western world
are becoming increasingly similar due to the influence of
transnational discourses and organizations. Others believe that
education is the panacea for all problems of social cohesion. After
all, aren't the well-educated usually more tolerant, civically
engaged and trusting than the poorly educated? This book critically
examines both claims. It finds that western countries still differ
markedly on key aspects of their education systems and that these
differences reflect distinct political traditions and different
responses to a set of competing normative and political principles.
The findings further suggest that raising the average education
level is unlikely to be an effective strategy for promoting social
cohesion. Instead, more promising are policies targeting the
opposite ends of the lifelong learning continuum: universalizing
pre-school education and care and promoting adult education with a
pronounced second chance character.
Econometrics of Health Care - which we have sometimes called
'medico metrics' - is a field in full expansion. The reasons are
numerous: our knowl edge of quantitative relations in the field of
health econometrics is far from being perfect, a large number of
analytical difficulties - combining medical (latent factors, e. g.
) and economic facts (spatial behaviour, e. g. ) are faced by the
research worker, medical and pharmaceutical techniques change
rapidly, medical costs rocket more than proportionally with
available resources, of being tightened. medical budgets are in the
process So it is not surprising that the practice of
'hygieconometrics' - to produce a neologism - is more and more
included in the programmes of econometri cians. The Applied
Econometrics Association has devoted to the topic two symposia in
less than three years (Lyons, February 1983; Rotterdam, December
1985), without experiencing any difficulties in getting valuable
papers: on econometrics of risks and medical insurance, on the
measurement of health status and of efficiency of medical
techniques, on general models allowing simulation. These were the
themes for the second meeting, but other aspects of
medical-economic problems had presented themselves already to the
analyst: medical decision making and its consequences, the
behaviour of the actors - patients and physicians -, regional
medicometrics and what not: some of them have been covered by the
first meeting. Finally, in July 1988 took place in Lyons the Fourth
International Conference on System Science in Health Care; it
should not be astonishing ."
Scholarly studies on the Igbo have been scanty and fragmented:
Politics and Identity Formation in Southeastern Nigeria: The Igbo
in Perspective fills an obvious gap. This book explores the social,
cultural, economic, political and aesthetic traditions that
distinguish the Igbo of southeastern Nigeria from their neighbors.
It is both multi- and cross-disciplinary in scope, content and
analyses, focusing essentially on experiences and forces that
shaped the Igbo society, Igbo identity formation, and Igbo
socio-cultural, political and aesthetic representations. The themes
interrogated in refreshing fashion with an appreciable level of
originality include the importance of Igbo names in understanding
the people’s social, linguistic, religious, gender, and cultural
identities, spiritual matters, Pentecostalism and their attendant
social, political, and economic consequences for the Igbo, and
textile and fashion museums of Igbo fabrics, attires, designs,
patterns and colors.
Asian shipping entrepreneurship relies on strong ties between
private entities and public institutions (i.e. governments). This
book examines the growth and sustainability of the Asian maritime
world through the lens of the Asian cultural code, its social and
institutional economics as well as its unique way of public
governance. The book addresses the economics of maritime industry
in a broader stroke to include ship owning, shipbuilding, port
operation and its links and collaborations to other industries from
a refreshing perspective. The book also examines major maritime
nations of Asia in three dimensions: history, strategy (also
policy) and the current state of the maritime industry. The
relationship between Asian shipping giants and public institutions
is also explored, along with the recent developments and challenges
of the regional maritime industry in the era of a marine tech boom,
upsizing tonnage and environmental debates. Its comprehensive
overview of and unique approach to the subject makes the book a
valuable reference to anyone interested in the topic.
This book offers an empirically-based view on Europeans'
interconnections in everyday life. It looks at the ways in which EU
residents have been getting closer across national frontiers: in
their everyday experiences of foreign countries - work, travel,
personal networks - but also their knowledge, consumption of
foreign products, and attitudes towards foreign culture. The book
considers how people reconcile their increasing cross-border
interconnections and a politically separating Europe of nation
states and national interests.
The shipping business is a lesser-known industry, but it is an
extremely influential element in the global economy. This book
provides a snapshot of the shipping business with micro-foundations
from the perspectives of institutional and behavioural economics
while uncovering hidden facts about the industry. Rather than
spending a great deal of time reading many books or consulting
costly advisors about fundamental issues, readers can quickly and
easily find core concepts examined from multiple perspectives. They
will certainly enjoy the engaging, narrative-driven content and
learn many surprising truths about this fascinating business.
The shipping business is a lesser-known industry, but it is an
extremely influential element in the global economy. This book
provides a snapshot of the shipping business with micro-foundations
from the perspectives of institutional and behavioural economics
while uncovering hidden facts about the industry. Rather than
spending a great deal of time reading many books or consulting
costly advisors about fundamental issues, readers can quickly and
easily find core concepts examined from multiple perspectives. They
will certainly enjoy the engaging, narrative-driven content and
learn many surprising truths about this fascinating business.
This volume comprehensively focuses on polycystic ovary, metabolic
syndrome and obesity and their impact on women's health,
reproduction and quality of life from adolescence to old age. PCOS
is analyzed form the early origins - highlighting the importance of
diagnosis, management and treatment starting from the high-risk
period of adolescence - throughout infertility PCOS-related issues,
pregnancy and menopause transition. All aspects of this syndrome
are covered also in relation with endocrine and metabolic features
that affects women's health. This book is a very useful tool for
gynecologists, endocrinologists, obstetricians, reproductive
medicine and general practitioners and is an important resource for
all physicians involved in women's health.
Asian shipping entrepreneurship relies on strong ties between
private entities and public institutions (i.e. governments). This
book examines the growth and sustainability of the Asian maritime
world through the lens of the Asian cultural code, its social and
institutional economics as well as its unique way of public
governance. The book addresses the economics of maritime industry
in a broader stroke to include ship owning, shipbuilding, port
operation and its links and collaborations to other industries from
a refreshing perspective. The book also examines major maritime
nations of Asia in three dimensions: history, strategy (also
policy) and the current state of the maritime industry. The
relationship between Asian shipping giants and public institutions
is also explored, along with the recent developments and challenges
of the regional maritime industry in the era of a marine tech boom,
upsizing tonnage and environmental debates. Its comprehensive
overview of and unique approach to the subject makes the book a
valuable reference to anyone interested in the topic.
Some scholars argue that education systems across the western world
are becoming increasingly similar due to the influence of
transnational discourses and organizations. Others believe that
education is the panacea for all problems of social cohesion. After
all, aren't the well-educated usually more tolerant, civically
engaged and trusting than the poorly educated? This book critically
examines both claims. It finds that western countries still differ
markedly on key aspects of their education systems and that these
differences reflect distinct political traditions and different
responses to a set of competing normative and political principles.
The findings further suggest that raising the average education
level is unlikely to be an effective strategy for promoting social
cohesion. Instead, more promising are policies targeting the
opposite ends of the lifelong learning continuum: universalizing
pre-school education and care and promoting adult education with a
pronounced second chance character.
From user-generated images of streets to professional architectural
renderings, and from digital maps and drone footages to
representations of invisible digital ecologies, this collection of
essays analyses the emergent practices of visualizing the street.
Today, advancements in digital technologies of the image have given
rise to the production and dissemination of imagery of streets and
urban realities in multiple forms. The ubiquitous presence of
digital visualizations has in turn created new forms of urban
practice and modes of spatial encounter. Everyone who carries a
smartphone not only plays an increasingly significant role in the
production, editing and circulation of images of the street, but
also relies on those images to experience urban worlds and to
navigate in them. Such entangled forms of image-making and
image-sharing have constructed new imaginaries of the street and
have had a significant impact on the ways in which contemporary and
future streets are understood, imagined, documented, navigated,
mediated and visualized. Visualizing the Street investigates the
social and cultural significance of these new developments at the
intersection of visual culture and urban space. The
interdisciplinary essays provide new concepts, theories and
research methods that combine close analyses of street images and
imaginaries with the study of the practices of their production and
circulation. The book covers a wide range of visible and invisible
geographies - From Hong Kong's streets to Rio's favelas, from
Sydney's suburbs to London's street markets, and from Damascus'
war-torn streets to Istanbul's sidewalks - and engages with
multiple ways in which visualizations of the street function to
document street protests and urban change, to build imaginaries of
urban communities and alternate worlds, and to help navigate
streetscapes.
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