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Reynard the Fox
Emma Louise Smythe
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R759
Discovery Miles 7 590
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This Handbook provides a broad and comprehensive overview of
psychological research on alcohol consumption. It explores the
psychological theories underpinning alcohol use and misuse,
discusses the interventions that can be designed around these
theories, and offers key insight into future developments within
the field. A range of international experts assess the unique
factors that contribute to alcohol-related behaviour as
differentiated from other health-related behaviours. They cover the
theory and context of alcohol consumption, including possible
implications of personality type, motivation and self-regulation,
and cultural and demographic factors. After reviewing the evidence
for psychological theories and predictors as accounts for alcohol
consumption, the book goes on to focus on external influences on
consumption and interventions for reducing alcohol consumption,
including those based on purchasing and consumption behaviour,
technologies such as personalised feedback apps, and social and
media phenomena such as "Dry January" and "Hello Sunday Morning".
It brings together cutting-edge contemporary research on alcohol
consumption in childhood and adolescence, including topics such as
managing offers or drinks, "pre-drinking", online identities, how
children develop their beliefs about alcohol and how adolescents
discuss alcohol with their parents. The book also offers a rounded
presentation of the tensions involved in debates around the
psychological impacts of alcohol use, discussing its role in
helping people to socialise and unwind; as well as recognising the
possible negative impacts on health, education and relationships.
This book will be of interest to academics, policymakers, public
health officials, practitioners, charities and other stakeholders
interested in understanding how alcohol affects people
psychologically. This book will also be a key resource for students
and researchers from across the social sciences.
This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It
contains classical literature works from over two thousand years.
Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore
shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the
cultural legacy and to promote the timeless works of classical
literature. Readers of a TREDITION CLASSICS book support the
mission to save many of the amazing works of world literature from
oblivion. With this series, tredition intends to make thousands of
international literature classics available in printed format again
- worldwide.
This volume examines how local actors respond to Africa's high
dependence on donor health funds. It focuses on the large infusion
of donor money to address HIV and AIDS into Malawi and Zambia and
the subsequent slow-down in that funding after 2009. How do local
people respond to this dynamic aid architecture and the myriad of
opportunities and constraints that accompany it? This book
conceptualizes dependent agency, and the condition in which local
actors can simultaneously act and be dependent, and investigates
conditions under which dependent agency occurs. Drawing upon
empirical data from Malawi and Zambia collected between 2005 and
2014, the work interrogates the nuanced strategies of dependent
agency: performances of compliance, extraversion, and resistance
below the line. The findings elucidate the dynamic interactions
between actors which often occur "off stage" but which undergird
macro-level development processes.
In recent decades, age studies has started to emerge as a new
approach to study children’s literature. This book builds on that
scholarship but also significantly extends it by exploring age in
various aspects of children’s literature: the age of the author,
the characters, the writing style, the intended readership and the
real reader. Moreover, the authors explore what different theories
and methods can be used to study age in children’s literature,
and what their affordances and limits are. The analyses combine age
studies with life writing studies, cognitive narratology, digital
humanities, comparative literary studies, reader-response research
and media studies. To ensure coherence, the book offers an in-depth
exploration of the oeuvre of a single author, David Almond. The
aesthetic and thematic richness of Almond’s works has been widely
recognised. This book adds to the understanding of his oeuvre by
offering a multi-faceted analysis of age. In addition to discussing
the film adaptation of his best-known novel Skellig, this book also
offers analyses of works that have received less attention, such as
Counting Stars, Clay and Bone Music. Readers will also get a fuller
understanding of Almond as a crosswriter of literature for
children, adolescents and adults.
Coastal zones are critical multiple-use resources, under pressure
from constant demands from different sources - conservation,
economic growth and social welfare. This book identifies the
dilemmas of managing conservation and development in coastal areas.
It offers important information on the management, conservation and
social implications of coastal resources. The authors present a
variety of participatory methods and techniques that can be used to
show the success or otherwise of the different uses and how they
affect the users. Their interdisciplinary analysis draws upon
scientific knowledge as well as the latest social science insights
on property rights and governance. The book is intended for
researchers and students in geography, development studies and
environmental planning, and also for practitioners in natural
resource management and coastal zone management.
Coastal zones are critical multiple-use resources, under pressure
from constant demands from different sources - conservation,
economic growth and social welfare. This book identifies the
dilemmas of managing conservation and development in coastal areas.
It offers important information on the management, conservation and
social implications of coastal resources. The authors present a
variety of participatory methods and techniques that can be used to
show the success or otherwise of the different uses and how they
affect the users. Their interdisciplinary analysis draws upon
scientific knowledge as well as the latest social science insights
on property rights and governance. The book is intended for
researchers and students in geography, development studies and
environmental planning, and also for practitioners in natural
resource management and coastal zone management.
This Handbook provides a broad and comprehensive overview of
psychological research on alcohol consumption. It explores the
psychological theories underpinning alcohol use and misuse,
discusses the interventions that can be designed around these
theories, and offers key insight into future developments within
the field. A range of international experts assess the unique
factors that contribute to alcohol-related behaviour as
differentiated from other health-related behaviours. They cover the
theory and context of alcohol consumption, including possible
implications of personality type, motivation and self-regulation,
and cultural and demographic factors. After reviewing the evidence
for psychological theories and predictors as accounts for alcohol
consumption, the book goes on to focus on external influences on
consumption and interventions for reducing alcohol consumption,
including those based on purchasing and consumption behaviour,
technologies such as personalised feedback apps, and social and
media phenomena such as "Dry January" and "Hello Sunday Morning".
It brings together cutting-edge contemporary research on alcohol
consumption in childhood and adolescence, including topics such as
managing offers or drinks, "pre-drinking", online identities, how
children develop their beliefs about alcohol and how adolescents
discuss alcohol with their parents. The book also offers a rounded
presentation of the tensions involved in debates around the
psychological impacts of alcohol use, discussing its role in
helping people to socialise and unwind; as well as recognising the
possible negative impacts on health, education and relationships.
This book will be of interest to academics, policymakers, public
health officials, practitioners, charities and other stakeholders
interested in understanding how alcohol affects people
psychologically. This book will also be a key resource for students
and researchers from across the social sciences.
This volume examines how local actors respond to Africa's high
dependence on donor health funds. It focuses on the large infusion
of donor money to address HIV and AIDS into Malawi and Zambia and
the subsequent slow-down in that funding after 2009. How do local
people respond to this dynamic aid architecture and the myriad of
opportunities and constraints that accompany it? This book
conceptualizes dependent agency, and the condition in which local
actors can simultaneously act and be dependent, and investigates
conditions under which dependent agency occurs. Drawing upon
empirical data from Malawi and Zambia collected between 2005 and
2014, the work interrogates the nuanced strategies of dependent
agency: performances of compliance, extraversion, and resistance
below the line. The findings elucidate the dynamic interactions
between actors which often occur "off stage" but which undergird
macro-level development processes.
Epigenetics in Cardiovascular Disease, a new volume in the
Translational Epigenetics series, offers a comprehensive overview
of the epigenetics mechanisms governing cardiovascular disease
development, as well as instructions in research methods and
guidance in pursing new studies. More than thirty international
experts provide an (i) overview of the epigenetics mechanisms and
their contribution to cardiovascular disease development, (i)
high-throughput methods for RNA profiling including single-cell
RNA-seq, (iii) the role of nucleic acid methylation in
cardiovascular disease development, (iv) epigenetic actors as
biomarkers and drug targets, (v) and the potential of epigenetics
to advance personalized medicine. Here, readers will discover
strategies to combat research challenges, improve quality of their
epigenetic research and reproducibility of their findings.
Additionally, discussion of assay and drug development for
personalized healthcare pave the way for a new era of understanding
in cardiovascular disease.
Shortlisted for the Outstanding Drama Education Resource with Music
& Drama Education Awards 2023. Do you struggle to find
appropriate scenes and monologues for young performers? Whilst
there are so many plays to choose from, the selection of material
for auditions, exams and competitions can often be overwhelming.
Monologues and Duologues for Young Performers offers a new
collection of original monologues, duologues and scenes for young
actors aged seven to fourteen that come ready-made for performance.
With more than thirty new pieces for male and female actors of
varying ages, these scenes explore a wide range of themes and
characters and the accompanying notes suggest a range of activities
for both the teacher and the student to help them develop the piece
for performance. All the scenes have been tried and tested by young
actors and many have been used in LAMDA examinations as well as for
Speech and Drama Festivals and auditions. Each scene is accompanied
by notes on character, background and setting as well as a range of
drama activities and questions to ask as an actor, making it an
ideal resource for those taking part in LAMDA and Trinity Speech
and Drama examinations as well as for drama competitions, other
examinations, auditions and theatre exploration.
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