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This exciting new WMU book series' volume features the first
attempt to include detailed experiences of women in the maritime
sector at a global level. It highlights the achievement of women in
the maritime sector, in particular, women's leadership and service
to the sustainable development of the maritime industry. The volume
contains contemporary studies on maritime women and follows an
inter-disciplinary approach. It offers an overview of women's
integration into the maritime sector since the late 1980s as well
as benchmarking its impact on various levels, such as policy,
employment, education, leadership and sustainability. Even 20 years
after the Beijing Declaration, gender-related challenges at work
still remain in the maritime sector, for example, lack of gender
policy, difficulty in work-life balance, access to education, and
leadership opportunities. The book addresses a series of
recommendations that may further help the integration of women into
the maritime sector.
"A humane and gripping work that illuminates how (and why) our
treatments of chronic illness fail, and a devastating portrait of
the ways our society fails to protect the bodies of its most
vulnerable members." Melissa Febos, author of Girlhood, winner of
the National Book Critics Circle Award WHAT'S WRONG? is author,
illustrator, and scientific researcher Erin Williams's graphic
exploration of how the American health-care system fails us.
Focusing on four raw and complex firsthand accounts, plus
Williams's own story, this book examines the consequences of living
with interconnected illnesses and conditions like: immunodeficiency
cancer endometriosis alcoholism severe depression PTSD Western
medicine, which intends to cure illness and minimize pain, often
causes more loss, abuse, and suffering for those Americans who
don't fit within the narrow definition of who the system was built
to serve--cis, white, heterosexual men. The book explores the many
ways in which those receiving medical care are often overlooked,
unseen, and doubted by the very clinicians who are supposed to heal
them. WHAT'S WRONG? is also a beautiful celebration of
nontraditional modes of healing, of how we become whole not because
of healthcare but despite it.
An intimate, clever, and ultimately gut-wrenching graphic memoir
about the daily decision women must make between being sexualized
or being invisible--now in paperback In Commute, we follow author
and illustrator Erin Williams on her daily commute to and from
work, punctuated by recollections of sexual encounters as well as
memories of her battle with alcoholism, addiction, and recovery. As
she moves through the world navigating banal, familiar, and
sometimes uncomfortable interactions with the familiar-faced
strangers she sees daily, Williams weaves together a riveting
collection of flashbacks. Williams recollections highlight the
indefinable moments when lines are crossed and a woman must ask
herself if the only way to avoid being objectified is to simply
cease drawing any attention to her physical being. She delves into
the gray space that lives between consent and assault and tenderly
explores the complexity of the shame, guilt, vulnerability, and
responsibility attached to both. Praise for Commute "This sharp and
splendidly drawn memoir will strike a strong chord in the current
moment. " --Publishers Weekly, starred review "One day's commute
offers time for the author to reflect on sexual predators,
alcoholism, and the experiences she understands better now than she
did at the time. . . . A catharsis for the author that fits
perfectly within a pivotal period for society and culture at
large." --Kirkus Reviews "This is welcoming, soul-baring,
stunningly interconnected, and very discussable." --Booklist
This hilarious, relatable, and interactive journal is the perfect
companion for those nine (or ten?!) months of excitement,
milestones, hormone swings, and baby/fruit size comparisons. Right
this very moment, you're growing a tiny life in your body and with
that life-growing comes a lot of feelings-some beautiful, some
exhilarating, and some straight-up ridiculous. You'll have a lot on
your mind and with The Big Journal for Pregnant People you can
record all the ups, downs, and in-betweens. With playful prompts,
brilliant quotes, pregnancy facts, straight-talking advice, and
plenty of space to draw, this book is a must-have for anyone who
wants to make some time for themselves before that precious arrival
changes, well, everything. Most baby books are about the baby. This
one is for you. Now go grab a pencil, you've got memories to make.
This exciting new WMU book series' volume features the first
attempt to include detailed experiences of women in the maritime
sector at a global level. It highlights the achievement of women in
the maritime sector, in particular, womenâs leadership and
service to the sustainable development of the maritime industry.
The volume contains contemporary studies on maritime women and
follows an inter-disciplinary approach. It offers an overview of
women's integration into the maritime sector since the late 1980s
as well as benchmarking its impact on various levels, such as
policy, employment, education, leadership and sustainability. Even
20 years after the Beijing Declaration, gender-related challenges
at work still remain in the maritime sector, for example, lack of
gender policy, difficulty in work-life balance, access to
education, and leadership opportunities. The book addresses a
series of recommendations that may further help the integration of
women into the maritime sector.
THE PERFECT GIFT FOR MUMS-TO-BE WITH A SENSE OF HUMOUR. Part diary,
part colouring book, and part brutally honest (and hysterically
funny) collection of advice, this is for the new mother who wants
to chill out, laugh her face off, and realise with every page that
she is not alone. Two stars of the lifestyle and parenting
blogosphere invoke the mindless fun and nostalgic appeal of an
old-school activity book in this irreverent, laugh-out-loud twist
on the traditional baby journal, with illustrated activities,
lists, essays, and musings on what pregnancy is really like. -
Wordsearches: Nope, Sorry (All the Stuff You're Not Allowed to Have
Anymore); Bad Baby Names - Mazes: Make it from Your Desk to the
Bathroom Without Throwing Up - Lists: How to Baby Shop Without
Crying - Advice: Yoga Teachers (Also Your Mum Friends, Your
Parents, People on Facebook, All Articles, and Everyone You Meet)
Want to Tell You How to Give Birth, But You Don t Have to Listen -
Quizzes: Stop: Labour Time!
'WHO KNEW MY ANXIETY COULD BE SO FUNNY?' Amy Morrison, founder of
Pregnant Chicken Feeling anxious? Who isn't! Your most irrational
(and sometimes rational) fears are hilarious fodder for this sharp
and relatable activity book. These days, anxiety is simply part of
the human experience. Part journal, part coloring book, part weird
coping mechanisms, and part compendium of soothing facts, The Big
Activity Book for Anxious Peoplewill be an outlet for anyone who
wants to take a break from reality, laugh through her fears, and
realize with every page that she is not alone--and to help her
figure out what to do when it's 3AM and she's wide awake worrying
about whether she cc'ed the right "Bob" on that email. (Probably.)
Activities include: * Fun Facts about Aging! * Public Speaking: A
Diagram * Your Hotel Room Carpet: A Petri Dish of Horrors * Obscure
Diseases You Probably Don't Have * Zen Mantras For The Anxiously
Inclined * Soothing Facts about Hand Sanitizer On a bad day, try
coloring in the soothing grandma. On a really bad day, find
step-by-step instructions on how to build an underground bunker.
Reid and Williams want everyone to remember that they're in good
company: anxious people are some of the funniest and most
interesting and creative humans on the planet. (They know, because
they are two of them.)
Sam feared her infertility would forever be an obstacle to finding
a lasting relationship, and when her boyfriend of two years
unceremoniously breaks up with her, she is ready to give up on love
altogether. With help from her effervescent friend, Holly, and her
happy-go-lucky boy friend from college, JB, she begins to see that
the relationship was more flawed than she ever imagined. After a
chance meeting with Spencer, a handsome man of honor who is
passionate about his hazardous job with the Navy, everything Sam's
ever known about men and relationships changes. But dating a man in
the military is not without its difficulties, and Sam has to decide
if she's willing to risk it all for a man who will be out of town
and in harm's way so often. When tragedy strikes while Spencer is
deployed, and her friendship with JB reaches an emotional climax,
Sam finds herself alone and doubting her future once again. Is she
capable of lasting love, or will her physical limitations and
insecurities always stand in her way?
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