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A modern and inclusive guide to help every child understand their
journey from childhood to being a grown-up. Growing up is a natural
part of life, and every child deserves to understand the different
ways their body may change as they grow older. While puberty
happens to everyone, every child's journey from childhood to being
a grown-up will be as unique as they are! In this honest,
accessible illustrated guide to puberty, young readers can find out
exactly what may happen as they grow from being a child to becoming
a grown-up. From getting taller and discovering hair growing in new
places to developing breasts, experiencing periods or having wet
dreams, this book provides the perfect stepping stone for every
caregiver to have an open conversation about what it really means
for a child to be growing up. Working closely with a leading
national LGBT organisation as well as a biology specialist and an
equality, diversity and inclusivity consultant, Growing Up covers
everything from biological sex and gender identity to physical
changes and emotional development, including sections on
friendships and emotional health, creating and respecting
boundaries and online safety. Written in friendly and accessible
language that can be shared with a child or read independently,
Growing Up also includes a further reading section and glossary to
answer more complex questions, as well as signposting where young
readers can find help from trusted sources outside of the home or
school environment.
To examine government policy and state practice on housing,
welfare, mental health, disability, prisons or immigration is to
come face-to-face with the harsh realities of the 'punitive state'.
But state violence and corporate harm always meet with resistance.
With contributions from a wide range of activists and scholars,
Resist the Punitive State highlights and theorises the front line
of resistance movements actively opposing the state-corporate
nexus. The chapters engage with different strategies of resistance
in a variety of movements and campaigns. In doing so the book
considers what we can learn from involvement in grassroots
struggles, and contributes to contemporary debates around the role
and significance of subversive knowledge and engaged scholarship in
activism. Aimed at activists and campaigners plus students,
researchers and educators in criminology, social policy, sociology,
social work and the social sciences more broadly, Resist the
Punitive State not only presents critiques of a range of harmful
state-corporate policy agendas but situates these in the context of
social movement struggles fighting for political transformation and
alternative futures.
Written by the author of the famous The Gun and Its Development.
Over 100 illustrations. The detailed contents cover a wide range of
subjects: Central Fire Guns - Breech Loading Shotguns - The Bacon,
Horsley, Wesson, Allen and Abbey Breech Loaders - Gun Powder -
Spherical Ball Rifles - Cartridges for Express Rifles - Explosive
Shells - The Snider Bullet - Rifling - Breech Loading Revolvers and
Double Barrel Pistols - Smith and Wesson revolver - Colts Revolvers
- Military Rifles and Cartridges - The Westley Richards Rifle -
Trajectories - Cartridges for Military Breech Loading Small Arms
etc. Many of the earliest gun books, particularly those dating back
to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. Home Farm Books are republishing many of these classic
works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the
original text and artwork.
In this honest, accessible illustrated guide to how babies are
made, young readers can find out exactly what is needed to grow a
baby, from introducing the basic building blocks of life such as
sperm and eggs, to explaining the different ways that these
building blocks can be put together to create a family. Working
closely with a leading national LGBT organisation, this inclusive
guide to Making a Baby covers sex, sperm and egg donation, IUI,
IVF, surrogacy and adoption, as well as explaining how a baby grows
in the womb and about different kinds of births. Written in gentle
and accessible language that can be shared with younger children or
read alone by confident readers, we hope this book and its charming
illustrations will provide the stepping stone for every parent to
have an open conversation with their child about how babies are
made, and their family began.
Police personnel have increasingly been deployed outside their own
domestic jurisdictions to uphold law and order and to help rebuild
states. This book explores the phenomenon of a new international
policing and outlines the range of challenges and opportunities it
presents to both practitioners and theorists.
This edition was originally published in 1898. The well illustrated
contents include detailed chapters on: - The Shotgun - Choice and
Fit - Handling the Gun - Chokes - Loads and Loading - Shooting
Positions - Game Shooting - Pigeons and Trap Shooting - Rifles of
Past and Present - The Sporting Rifle and All About It - Rifle
Shooting - Long Shots - Bores etc. Many of the earliest shooting
books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are
now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. Home Farm Books
are republishing many of these classic works in affordable, high
quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwor
Social Policy Review provides students, academics and all those
interested in welfare issues with critical analyses of progress and
change in areas of major interest during the past year. This year
the Review takes the opportunity of the 60th anniversary of the key
legislation founding the welfare state in the UK to provide a
comprehensive overview of policy developments in the UK and
internationally. The first part brings together a selection of
papers which have been commissioned to examine historical and
contemporary developments in policy tackling Beveridge's five evils
of want, idleness, disease, squalor and ignorance, looking at how
policy has changed since the aims and ideology of the inception of
the post-war welfare state. The second part looks at the issue of
the current challenges facing children's welfare services
internationally: always a contemporary and contentious issue. The
final part brings together a selection of papers looking at the
effect of policy development at various governance levels on social
policy. The contributions bring together an exciting mix of
internationally renowned authors to provide comprehensive
discussion of the some of the most challenging issues facing social
policy today.
This brand new book is designed to support undergraduate and
graduate students taking their first modules in medical physics. It
can be recommended as an overarching book to support students
studying a number of modules (such as medical imaging and
radiotherapy), as general introductory reading on a medical physics
course, or as a dedicated book for a specific module on
"Introduction to Medical Physics." The book covers the basic
principles and applications of medical physics equipment and the
role of a medical physicist in healthcare. The book is ideally
suited for new teaching schemes such as Modernising Scientific
Careers, and will be invaluable for all medical physics students
worldwide.
NHS reform continues to be a topical yet contentious issue in the
UK. Reforming healthcare: What's the evidence? is the first major
critical overview of the research published on healthcare reform in
England from 1990 onwards by a team of leading UK health policy
academics. It explores work considering the Conservative internal
market of the 1990s and New Labour's healthcare reorganizations,
including its attempts at performance management and the
reintroduction of market-based reform from 2004 to 2010. It then
considers the implications of this research for current debates
about healthcare reorganization in England, and internationally. As
the most up-to-date summary of what research says works in English
healthcare reform, this essential review is aimed at anyone
interested in the wide-ranging debates about health reorganization,
but especially students and academics interested in social policy,
public management and health policy.
Social Policy Review provides students, academics, and all those
interested in UK welfare issues with critical analyses of progress
and change in areas of major interest during the past year. The
book presents an up-to-date and diverse review of the best in
social policy scholarship. It brings together specially
commissioned reviews of key areas of UK research, examining
important debates in the field. It considers a range of issues,
including assessments of Labour's social policy after three terms
in office, service-user involvement, and the labor market impact of
the economic crisis. It also includes the winner of the Social
Policy Association's best postgraduate paper award.
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