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"Averting Global War "examines major regional disputes and
conflicts throughout the world as they impact upon both American
domestic and foreign policy. These include: The ongoing "war on
terrorism"; NATO enlargement to Russian borders; US intervention in
Iraq; US confrontation with Iran; the feud between Israel and the
Palestinians; the widening "zone of conflict" from Central Asia to
sub-Saharan Africa; the global ramifications of North Korea's
nuclear program and China's claims to Taiwan; Venezuela's
"Bolivarian Revolution" and the "war on drugs" in Latin America,
the domestic socio-political effects of Latin American immigration
upon the US. The book's goal is to articulate an irenic American
strategy intended to resolve, or at least transform, a number of
these disputes and conflicts so as to prevent them from further
"deepening" or "widening"--and to avert the real possibility of
major power confrontation involving both clandestine and overt
methods of warfare.
Combined with the US pivot to Asia, NATO enlargement could press
Russia and a rising China into a tighter alliance--but with Russia
playing the role of a junior partner. This book argues for bringing
Russia, Ukraine, and Turkey into a new Euro-Atlantic confederation,
not only in order to draw Moscow away from forging a closer
military relationship with Beijing but also to help revitalize a
Europe in crisis. Concurrently, Washington and Moscow need to work
together to prevent disputes between North and South Korea, Japan,
and China, as well as between Israel, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Syria,
and Iran from exploding into a major power war.
Studies in landscape ecology focus on the effect of heterogeneity on ecosystem structure and function. Vigorous growth in the field has included the development of methods and results that can be applied to an impressive range of environmental issues. The purpose of this book is to provide the reader with a current perspective on this rapidly developing science. This book features contributions by internationally renowned experts in the field that address a broad spectrum of political, theoretical and applied aspects of the subject. Chapters describe a number of methods and models that are used at landscape and regional scales within the context of ecosystem management, to assess changes in biodiversity, and to evaluate sustainable landscape planning for cultural as well as natural settings. Also included are instructional models to assist in teaching.
Originally published in 1955, this book describes in a clear and
concise way the nature of a Trade Union in England from the legal
point of view, the particular aspects of the Law which make it
possible for Trade Unions to carry on their activities and the
restraints which the Law place on them for the protection of their
members and the community. It briefly reviews the history of Trade
Union Law, describes the Acts of Parliament which made the modern
Trade Union possible and deals with those aspects of the Law which
are important for those who have industrial relations with Trade
Unions.
This work provides in-depth analysis of the origins of landscape
ecology and its close alignment with the understanding of scale,
the causes of landscape pattern, and the interactions of spatial
pattern with a variety of ecological processes. The text covers the
quantitative approaches that are applied widely in landscape
studies, with emphasis on their appropriate use and interpretation.
The field of landscape ecology has grown rapidly during this
period, its concepts and methods have matured, and the published
literature has increased exponentially. Landscape research has
enhanced understanding of the causes and consequences of spatial
heterogeneity and how these vary with scale, and they have
influenced the management of natural and human-dominated
landscapes. Landscape ecology is now considered mainstream, and the
approaches are widely used in many branches of ecology and are
applied not only in terrestrial settings but also in aquatic and
marine systems. In response to these rapid developments, an updated
edition of Landscape Ecology in Theory and Practice provides a
synthetic overview of landscape ecology, including its development,
the methods and techniques that are employed, the major questions
addressed, and the insights that have been gained."
Surmounting the Global Crisis critiques the impact of NATO
enlargement and the US 'pivot to Asia' on both the Russia and China
and examines how these dual US-backed policies may influence key
countries in the Euro-Atlantic, wider Middle East, and Indo-Pacific
regions in general.
Landscape ecology as a modern interdisciplinary science is making use increasingly of quantitative research techniques adopted from other fields. So far, no synthetic reference has been available to those wishing to acquaint themselves with new approaches to quantitative analysis of spatial heterogeneity at the landcape level. This book seeks to meet this need by providing a conceptual framework and illustrating potential applications for methods such as pattern analysis, spatial statistics, fractals, spatial modeling, broad-scale studies, and extrapolation across scales. Each technique is discussed in sufficient detail to be adaptable to a variety of research problems. Quantitative Methods in Landscape Ecology is an important resource for researchers and students of landscape and ecosystem ecology in understanding and analyzing the dynamics of complex spatial systems.
Offers a fresh perspective on how conversation analysis can be used
to highlight the sophisticated nature of what children actually do
when interacting with their peers, parents, and other adults.
Brings together a contributor team of leading experts in the
emerging field of child-focused conversation analytic studies, from
both academic and professional research backgrounds Includes
examples of typically developing children and those who face a
variety of challenges to participation, as they interact with
parents and friends, teachers, counsellors and health professionals
Encompasses linguistic, psychological and sociological perspectives
Offers new insights into children's communication as they move from
home into wider society, highlighting how this is expressed in
different cultural contexts
"Averting Global War "examines major regional disputes and
conflicts throughout the world as they impact upon both American
domestic and foreign policy. These include: The ongoing "war on
terrorism"; NATO enlargement to Russian borders; US intervention in
Iraq; US confrontation with Iran; the feud between Israel and the
Palestinians; the widening "zone of conflict" from Central Asia to
sub-Saharan Africa; the global ramifications of North Korea's
nuclear program and China's claims to Taiwan; Venezuela's
"Bolivarian Revolution" and the "war on drugs" in Latin America,
the domestic socio-political effects of Latin American immigration
upon the US. The book's goal is to articulate an irenic American
strategy intended to resolve, or at least transform, a number of
these disputes and conflicts so as to prevent them from further
"deepening" or "widening"--and to avert the real possibility of
major power confrontation involving both clandestine and overt
methods of warfare.
Gendering Time in Augustan Love Elegy examines how and why time
appears to affect men and women differently in Latin love elegy.
Considering the genre's brief flowering during the Augustan
Principate, it aims to situate the elegies of Propertius, Tibullus,
and Ovid in their social and political milieu. The volume argues
that the imperatives of the new regime, which encouraged a younger
generation of loyalists to participate in the machinery of
government, placed temporal pressures on the elite male that shaped
the amator's (poet-lover's) resistance to enter a course of civil
service and prompted his withdrawal into the arms of a courtesan,
and therefore unmarriageable, beloved.
In the second part of the volume Gardner focuses on the divergent
temporal experiences of the amator and his beloved courtesan-puella
(girl) through the lens of 'women's time' (le temps des femmes) and
the chora, as theorized by psycholinguist Julia Kristeva.
Kristeva's model of feminine subjectivity, defined by repetition,
cyclicality, and eternity, allows us to understand how the
beloved's marginalization from the realm of historical time proves
advantageous to her amator, wishing to defer his entrance into
civic life. The antithesis between the properties of 'women's time'
and the linear momentum that defines masculine subjectivity,
moreover, demonstrates how 'women's time' ultimately thwarts the
amator's often promised generic evolution.
Scientists, journalists, novelists, and filmmakers continue to
generate narratives of contagion, stories shaped by a tradition of
disease discourse that extends to early Greco-Roman literature.
Lucretius, Vergil, and Ovid developed important conventions of the
western plague narrative as a response to the breakdown of the
Roman res publica in the mid-first century CE and the
reconstitution of stabilized government under the Augustan
Principate (31 BCE-14 CE): relying on the metaphoric relationship
between the human body and the body politic, these authors used
largely fictive representations of epidemic disease to address the
collapse of the social order and suggest remedies for its recovery.
Theorists such as Susan Sontag and Rene Girard have observed how
the rhetoric of disease frequently signals social, psychological,
or political pathologies, but their observations have rarely been
applied to Latin literary practices. Pestilence and the Body
Politic in Latin Literature explores how the origins and spread of
outbreaks described by Roman writers enact a drama in which the
concerns of the individual must be weighed against those of the
collective, staged in an environment signalling both reversion to a
pre-historic Golden Age and the devastation characteristic of a
post-apocalyptic landscape. Such innovations in Latin literature
have impacted representations as diverse as Carlo Coppola's
paintings of a seventeenth-century outbreak of bubonic plague in
Naples and Margaret Atwood's Maddaddam Trilogy. Understanding why
Latin writers developed these tropes for articulating contagious
disease and imbuing them with meaning for the collapse of the Roman
body politic allows us to clarify what more recent disease
discourses mean both for their creators and for the populations
they afflict in contemporary media.
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Wakefield (Paperback)
Troy H Gardner, Erin Callahan
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R361
Discovery Miles 3 610
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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