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How and why does job stress manifest as negative emotions,
disordered thoughts, deleterious behaviors, and physical illness?
How can positive outcomes like growth and mastery be encouraged
instead? Job stress theories provide insights that guide practical
decision making on how to mitigate the negative effects, and
promote the positive outcomes, of job demands for the organization
and its constituents. This book provides a review of the empirical
support for nearly 100 job stress frameworks, and presents guidance
for theoretical applications, testing, refinement, and
integrations. In addition to providing an overview of the theories,
models, and hypotheses related to job stress, the authors present
organizational and individual implications for both management and
personal improvement. For scholars, gaps in the literature are
identified to facilitate future research. Instructors and students
will find this knowledge valuable for organizational
psychology/behavior, occupational health psychology, or job stress
classes, among others. Altogether, students, researchers, and
practitioners will find this Introduction integral to their
learning, and benefit from the actionable research ideas and
suggestions for stress reduction.
This is a provocative collection of timely reflections on the state
of social democracy and its inextricable links to crime and
justice. Authored by some of the world's leading thinkers from the
UK, US, Canada and Australia, the volume provides an understanding
of socially sustainable societies.
This book offers a unique insight into the moral politics behind
the making of human trafficking policy in Australia and the United
States of America. As governments around the world rush to meet
their international obligations to combat human trafficking, a
heated debate has emerged over the rights, wrongs, and harms of
prostitution, and its relationship to sex trafficking. The Politics
of Sex Trafficking identifies and challenges intrinsic notions of
moral harm that have pervaded trafficking discourse and resulted in
a distinctly anti-prostitution agenda in trafficking policy in
recent decades. Including rare interviews with key political
actors, this book charts the competing perspectives of feminist,
faith-based, and sex-worker activists, and their efforts to
influence policy-makers. This critical account of the creation of
anti-trafficking policy challenges the sex trafficking narrative
dominant in US Congressional and Australian Parliamentary hearings,
and demonstrates the power of a moral politics in shaping
policy.This book will appeal to academics across the fields of
criminology, criminal justice, law, human rights and gender
studies, as well as policy-makers.
This book focuses on faculty members in a learning community in the
College of Education at Florida International University. It
discusses their pedagogical efforts to structure learning
environments consistent with the philosophical orientation in the
college's conceptual framework to call forth dispositions, or key
habits of mind that are consistent with reflective intelligence.
The first-ever study of state park segregation across the Jim Crow
SouthWinner, J. B. Jackson Book Prize from the Foundation for
Landscape StudiesAward of Merit, American Association for State and
Local History An outgrowth of earlier park movements, the state
park movement in the twentieth century sought to expand public
access to scenic places. But under severe Jim Crow restrictions in
the South, access for Blacks was routinely and officially denied.
The New Deal brought a massive wave of state park expansion, and
advocacy groups pressured the National Park Service to design and
construct segregated facilities for Blacks. These parks were
typically substandard in relation to "white only" areas.After World
War II, the NAACP filed federal lawsuits that demanded park
integration, and southern park agencies reacted with attempts to
expand access to additional segregated facilities, hoping they
could demonstrate that their parks achieved the "separate but
equal" standard. But the courts consistently ruled in favor of
integration, leading to the end of state park segregation by the
mid-1960s. Even though it has largely faded from public awareness,
the imprint of segregated state park design remains visible
throughout the South.William E. O'Brien illuminates this untold
facet of Jim Crow history in the first-ever study of state park
segregation. Emphasizing the historical trajectory of events
leading to integration, his book underscores the profound
inequality that persisted for decades in the number, size, and
quality of state park spaces provided for Black visitors across the
Jim Crow South.
This is a provocative collection of timely reflections on the state
of social democracy and its inextricable links to crime and
justice. Authored by some of the world's leading thinkers from the
UK, US, Canada and Australia, the volume provides an understanding
of socially sustainable societies.
This book offers a unique insight into the moral politics behind
human trafficking policy in Australia and the USA, including rare
interviews with key political actors, and a critical account of
Congressional and Parliamentary hearings.
Shedding fresh light on modern art beyond the West, this text
introduces readers to artists, art movements, debates and
theoretical positions of the modern era that continue to shape
contemporary art worldwide. Area histories of modern art are
repositioned and interconnected towards a global art
historiography. * Provides a much-needed corrective to the
Eurocentric historiography of modern art, offering a more worldly
and expanded view than any existing modern art survey * Brings
together a selection of major essays and historical documents from
a wide range of sources * Section introductions, critical essays,
and documents provide the relevant contextual and historiographical
material, link the selections together, and guide the reader
through the key theoretical positions and debates * Offers a useful
tool for students and scholars with little or no prior knowledge of
non-Western modernisms * Includes many contrasting voices in its
documents and essays, encouraging reader response and lively
classroom discussion * Includes a selection of major essays and
historical documents addressing not only painting and sculpture but
photography, film and architecture as well.
Critique of Rationality postulates aesthetic-consciousness as the
site of socialisation in communities of meaning, as a frame for
judgment and creativity, arguing that struggling to awaken that
consciousness is essential to an open society. In making this
argument, O'Brien moves through phenomenology, epistemology,
Romanticism, aesthetics, and psycho-analytics, drawing on many of
the key thinkers of western philosophy on the way.
Shedding fresh light on modern art beyond the West, this text
introduces readers to artists, art movements, debates and
theoretical positions of the modern era that continue to shape
contemporary art worldwide. Area histories of modern art are
repositioned and interconnected towards a global art
historiography. * Provides a much-needed corrective to the
Eurocentric historiography of modern art, offering a more worldly
and expanded view than any existing modern art survey * Brings
together a selection of major essays and historical documents from
a wide range of sources * Section introductions, critical essays,
and documents provide the relevant contextual and historiographical
material, link the selections together, and guide the reader
through the key theoretical positions and debates * Offers a useful
tool for students and scholars with little or no prior knowledge of
non-Western modernisms * Includes many contrasting voices in its
documents and essays, encouraging reader response and lively
classroom discussion * Includes a selection of major essays and
historical documents addressing not only painting and sculpture but
photography, film and architecture as well.
Growing interest in the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs),
particularly for homeland security and law enforcement
applications, has spurred considerable debate over how to
accommodate these unmanned aircraft and keep them safely separated
from other air traffic. Additionally, the use of these pilotless
aircraft, popularly referred to as drones, for aerial surveillance
and law enforcement purposes has raised specific concerns regarding
privacy and Fourth Amendment rights and potential intrusiveness.
These issues have come to the forefront in policy debate in
response to provisions in the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of
2012 that require the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to
begin integrating unmanned aircraft into the national airspace
system by the end of FY2015. This book examines the challenges,
privacy implications and potential intrusiveness of drone
operations which have emerged as a significant issue before
Congress.
Using the historical-materialist method to unravel the promise and
limits of critical practice since the Revolutionary Age, John E.
O'Brien investigates the problems and prospects of cultural
criticism for the 21st century through absorbing studies of the
contested perspectives of Voltaire, Friedrich Schiller, Jean
Baudrillard, Michel Foucault, Terry Eagleton and Hayden White.
O'Brien's investigation of resistance in America and Europe
challenges the bourgeois philosophy of history, pointing to the
urgency of critique as mode of analysis and intervention.
Hawk Wisdom is about how to have self-defense in the marketplace
where the stories told reveal the most likely outcome of a
transaction. Conditions of trade, good or bad, are often
unknowingly revealed by sales people, brokers and anyone engaged in
buying and selling through everyday conversation and chit chat.
Without an understanding of this concept, valuable information goes
unnoticed. Hawk Wisdom is dynamic pattern reading and gives the
reader a good grasp of how to look for patterns of information
which emerge during dialogues between people in the marketplace. It
is a fascinating concept and a valuable skill.
This is a new release of the original 1929 edition.
As design emerges throughout the United States Army's planning and
operational doctrine, the intelligence community must leverage this
structure of inquiry to identify and refocus the scope of what is
collected, analyzed, produced and disseminated. Design is defined
as, "a methodology for applying critical and creative thinking to
understand, visualize, and describe complex, ill-structured
problems and develop approaches to solve them." In other words,
design is the holistic process of looking at the environment,
framing the problem and deriving possible solutions. The use of
design by the intelligence community broadens the scope of
collected and analyzed information providing more relevant
intelligence to commanders in the current operational environment.
With this in mind, the knowledge and application of design should
play an integral role in synthesizing intelligence, driving current
and future operations. The purpose of this study is to propose that
by employing design methodologies the intelligence community can
provide improved and fused intelligence to operational level
commanders resulting in more focused and relevant operations. This
monograph shows design's utility lies in the intelligence function
of fusion. When intelligence professionals use available data and
information together, they fuse sources into a more reliable
product. Therefore, the use of design provides intelligence
officers a better understanding of the environment and can provide
better recommendations on courses of actions to the commanders.
Drawing from design theory (the environmental frame, problem frame
and solution space), this monograph examines cases within the
context of Afghanistan from 2001-2009. Using four criteria from
design theory, more specifically tenets of problem reframing, this
monograph evaluates the months of September 2005 and July 2007. The
criteria used are experimentation, learning, discourse and
application of generating tools to suggest intelligence professi
In 1988, the Education Division produced an inventory of
NASA-supported education programs. Since then, mathematics,
science, and technology education has taken on a more visible role,
not only as part of NASA's mission, but as part of the National
Education Goals and other Federal initiatives. Therefore, it became
important to update the 1988 inventory in order to achieve a more
accurate and comprehensive look at NASA's educational programs. The
data collected is summarized and descriptions of each program are
provided.
Studies historical examples of land transportation having a serious
affect on operations. Seeks to discover reasons for failure and
outlines possible solutions.
1929. This work contains a brief description of three quests for
happiness, Alcott's Fruitlands, Old Shaker House, and American
Indian Museum rescued from oblivion, recorded and preserved by
Clara Endicott Sears on Prospect Hill in the old township of
Harvard, Massachusetts. Copiously illustrated throughout with
gorgeous photos.
1929. This work contains a brief description of three quests for
happiness, Alcott's Fruitlands, Old Shaker House, and American
Indian Museum rescued from oblivion, recorded and preserved by
Clara Endicott Sears on Prospect Hill in the old township of
Harvard, Massachusetts. Copiously illustrated throughout with
gorgeous photos.
1929. This work contains a brief description of three quests for
happiness, Alcott's Fruitlands, Old Shaker House, and American
Indian Museum rescued from oblivion, recorded and preserved by
Clara Endicott Sears on Prospect Hill in the old township of
Harvard, Massachusetts. Copiously illustrated throughout with
gorgeous photos.
The math is clear and simple. We have, at most, forty more years of
living this self-serving lie before the combined forces of
overpopulation and resource depletion expose Global Civilization
for what it really is-an unsustainable mirage. We, the over-40,
have timed it perfectly. The planet will run out of fresh,
unpolluted water and nutrient-rich topsoil just as we are finishing
our extended lives of abundance, greed, and gluttony. We have been
waging a resource war against the generations behind us. And the
good news is-we are winning So far. But what if they learn the
Truth? What if they find out that we have been stealing from them
and deceiving them? What if Internet communication unifies them?
And what if they live in a country where weapons are accessible and
violence is glorified? History, too, is clear and simple. When
conditions warrant, when the situation is sufficiently extreme,
human beings are capable of-whatever it takes. They will not go
quietly. Brace yourselves for the most deterministic generation
since the Conquerors of World War II. The Heroes of the Seventh
Crisis are coming. And they're pissed off.
This work contains a brief description of three quests for
happiness, Alcott's Fruitlands, Old Shaker House, and American
Indian Museum rescued from oblivion, recorded & preserved by
Clara Endicott Sears on Prospect Hill in the old township of
Harvard, Massachusetts. Copiously illustrated throughout with
gorgeous photos.
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