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One of the most pioneering development economists, Hans Singer stimulated many of the ideas that have engaged the attention of the world community for several decades. This collection brings together for the first time key essays on the issues underlying food aid and the development of the UN. These are grouped into five areas : post-war development experience; reform of the UN; debt and debt servicing; structural adjustment and stabilization; and food aid.
Peter Singer has been described as one of the world's most
influential philosophers, as well as one of the most dangerous.
This collection, selected by Singer's close colleague and
collaborator Helga Kuhse, provides readers with a one-volume
account of his underlying philosophy, as well as its practical
implications upon everyday living. "
Unsanctifying Human Life "brings together some of Singer's best
and most challenging articles from 1971 to the present. The book
includes early critiques of various approaches to philosophy and
the role of philosophers, followed by controversial works on the
moral status of animals, infanticide, euthanasia, the allocation of
scarce health care resources, embryo experimentation, environmental
responsibility, and reflections on how we should live.
Supporting Families of Children with Developmental Disabilities:
Evidence-based and Emerging Practices provides a comprehensive
review of the empirical evidence on interventions for families of
individuals - ranging from post-preschool age to adulthood - with
developmental disabilities. The book presents both narrative and
meta-analytic syntheses of a large body of research to evaluate
which interventions meet contemporary standards as evidence based
practices. The body of studies reviewed in the book has not
previously been gathered into one volume, nor evaluated as a whole
for the quality and extent of the evidence. The research is
presented in the context of contemporary social policy and
practices aimed at maximizing the development of children with
disabilities while increasing the quality of life of their
families. The criteria and procedures followed for identifying,
reviewing, evaluating, and categorizing the studies are articulated
in line with other major professional standards. Individual
chapters focus on several different schools of practice, including:
group psycho-educational interventions, behavioral parent training,
multiple component interventions, supportive interventions for
families of children with autism, home- and school-based practices,
self-help groups, and advocacy programs. Supporting Families of
Children with Developmental Disabilities is an important tool for
moving the disability field forward for future research, practice,
and social policy.
Multiple complex pathways, characterized by interrelated events and
c- ditions, represent routes to many illnesses, diseases, and
ultimately death. Although there are substantial data and
plausibility arguments suppo- ing many conditions as contributory
components of pathways to illness and disease end points, we have,
historically, lacked an e?ective method- ogy for identifying the
structure of the full pathways. Regression methods, with strong
linearity assumptions and data-basedconstraints onthe extent and
order of interaction terms, have traditionally been the strategies
of choice for relating outcomes to potentially complex explanatory
pathways. However, nonlinear relationships among candidate
explanatory variables are a generic feature that must be dealt with
in any characterization of how health outcomes come about. It is
noteworthy that similar challenges arise from data analyses in
Economics, Finance, Engineering, etc. Thus, the purpose of this
book is to demonstrate the e?ectiveness of a relatively recently
developed methodology-recursive partitioning-as a response to this
challenge. We also compare and contrast what is learned via rec-
sive partitioning with results obtained on the same data sets using
more traditional methods. This serves to highlight exactly
where-and for what kinds of questions-recursive partitioning-based
strategies have a decisive advantage over classical regression
techniques.
Models to forecast changes in mortality, morbidity, and disability
in elderly populations are essential to national and state policies
for health and welfare programs. This volume presents a
wide-ranging survey of the forecasting of health of elderly
populations, including the modelling of the incidence of chronic
diseases in the elderly, the differing perspectives of actuarial
and health care statistics, and an assessment of the impact of new
technologies on the elderly population. Amongst the topics covered
are - uncertainties in projections from census and social security
data and actuarial approaches to forecasting - plausible ranges for
population growth using biol ogical models and epidemiological time
series data - the financing of long term care programs - the
effects of major disabling diseases on health expenditures -
forecasting cancer risks and risk factors As a result, this
wide-ranging volume will become an indispensable reference for all
those whose research touches on these topics.
As one of the most pioneering development economists, Hans Singer
has stimulated many of the ideas that have engaged the attention of
the world community for several decades. Not only has he helped to
form an understanding of the problems of developing countries, but
he has also shown what might be done to solve them. This collection
brings together for the first time key essays on the issues
underlying food aid and the development of the UN. These are
grouped into five areas: postwar development experience; reform of
the United Nations; debt and debt servicing; structural adjustment
and stabilization; and food aid.
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Ergon (Paperback)
George H.S. Singer
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R453
Discovery Miles 4 530
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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