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Drawing on thirty years experience as a regression therapist and
her own memories and experiences in Egypt, ancient and modern, Torn
Clouds is a remarkable first novel by an internationally-acclaimed
MBS author, one of Britain's leading experts on reincarnation. It
features time-traveller Megan McKennar, whose past life memories
thrust themselves into the present day as she traces a love affair
that transcends time. Haunted by her dreams, she is driven by
forces she cannot understand to take a trip to Egypt in a quest to
understand the cause of her unhappy current life circumstances.
Once there, swooning into a previous existence in Pharaonic Egypt,
she lives again as Meck'an'ar, priestess of the Goddess Sekhmet,
the fearful lion headed deity who was simultaneously the Goddess of
Terror, Magic and Healing. Caught up in the dark historical secrets
of Egypt, Megan is forced to fight for her soul. She succeeds in
breaking the curse that had been cast upon her in two incarnations.
Recent research on the economics of innovation has acknowledged the
importance of path dependence and networks in the evolution of
economies and the diffusion of new techniques, products, and
processes. These are topics pioneered by Paul A. David, one of the
world's leading scholars in the economics of innovation. This
outstanding collection provides a fitting tribute to the diversity
and depth of Paul David's contributions. The papers included range
from simulation models of the evolution of market structure in the
presence of innovation, through historical investigations of
knowledge networks and empirical analysis of contemporary networks,
to the analysis of the diffusion of innovations using simulation
and analytic models and of the diffusion of knowledge using patent
data. With an emphasis on simulation models, data analysis, and
historical evidence, this book will be required reading for
researchers in innovation economics and regional development as
well as economists, sociologists, and historians of innovation and
intellectual property.
Finally! The African American Historical prospective you've been
waiting for! If you deserve the African American truth, demand it -
by reading and sharing the truth.
The subject of divided critical opinion because of the experimental
nature of his writings and his use of radical subject matter, Jerzy
Kosinski, author of such novels as The Painted Bird and Being
There, nevertheless ranks among the most celebrated of contemporary
American authors. By the time of his death in May 1991, 70 million
copies of his novels were in circulation. He received various
academic posts, awards, and fellowships during his lifetime--these
and the immense popularity of his writings confirm Kosinski as a
major figure in modern American literature. The range of critical
response is in evidence in this carefully annotated bibliography.
It comprises listings of both primary and secondary sources on
Kosinski through 1990. The primary sources provide editions of his
novels, recordings, nonfiction books, miscellaneous writings, and
interviews. Secondary sources include reference materials, books
and monographs, biographical sources, dissertations, and criticism
and reviews specific to particular works. Access is facilitated by
author and subject indexes. The work will be of special value to
those interested in Holocaust and expatriate fiction as well as to
students of twentieth-century American and American-Jewish
literature in general.
Economics of Research and Development is a research review of the
major readings in the development of this topic, from its origins
in the work of Kenneth Arrow, Robert Solow, and Zvi Griliches to
present day concerns with the financing of R&D and measurement
of its returns. Topics covered include historical perspectives,
market structure and the various ways R&D is conducted, the
role of venture capital and government incentives, the measurement
of R&D returns including spillovers to other firms or countries
and the contribution of R&D to economic growth. This research
review serves as an invaluable reference for those who would like
to have a review of the seminal papers on R&D collected into a
single source.
Protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs) serves a dual
role in economic development. While it promotes innovation by
providing legal protection of inventions, it may retard catch-up
and learning by restricting the diffusion of innovations. Does
stronger IPR protection in a developing country encourage
technology development in or technology transfer to that country?
This book aims to address the issue, covering diverse forms of
IPRs, varied actors in innovation, and multiple case studies from
Asia and Latin America. IPRs and their interaction with other
factors such as such as the quality of knowledge institutions (e.g.
academia, public research institutes or industrial research centers
such as science parks), availability of trained human capital, and
networks for research collaboration or interaction (e.g.
university-industry research collaboration or international
collaboration) in a development context, is the subject of this
book.Intellectual Property for Economic Development: - Considers
the diverse forms of IPRs and technology transfer and their
implications for economic development. - Analyzes the role of
inventors in different contexts including those in universities and
in domestic and international mobility and collaborations. -
Presents in-depth analyses of specific issues involving IPRs in the
context of countries at different levels of development, including
Mexico, China and Korea. Focus is paid to the differences between
East Asia and Latin America. This book will appeal to academics and
researchers in the areas of development economics, the economics of
IP, law and economics and IP innovation. Contributors: S.A. Ahn,
C.R. Duran, B.H. Hall, A. Hu, S. Karmakar, J. Kim, Y.K. Kim, K.
Lee, S. Lee, D.C. Lippoldt, G. Marschke, F. Montobbio, S. Nagaoka,
T. Naotoshi, K.-H. Park, W.G. Park, V. Sterzi, J. Suh
Based upon classical and contemporary theory and empirical
research, this text forms a sociological analysis of organizations,
focusing on the impacts that organizations have upon individuals
and society.
This is the first book that documents poverty systematically for
the world's indigenous peoples in developing regions in Asia,
Africa, and Latin America. The volume compiles results for roughly
85 percent of the world's indigenous peoples. It draws on
nationally representative data to compare trends in countries'
poverty rates and other social indicators with those for indigenous
sub-populations and provides comparable data for a wide range of
countries all over the world. It estimates global poverty numbers
and analyzes other important development indicators, such as
schooling, health, and social protection. Provocatively, the
results show a marked difference in results across regions, with
rapid poverty reduction among indigenous (and non-indigenous)
populations in Asia contrasting with relative stagnation and in
some cases falling back in Latin America and Africa. Two main
factors motivate the book. First, there is a growing concern among
poverty analysts worldwide that countries with significant
vulnerable populations such as indigenous peoples may not meet the
Millennium Development Goals, and thus there exists a consequent
need for better data tracking conditions among these groups.
Second, there is a growing call by indigenous organizations,
including the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Peoples,
for solid, disaggregated data analyzing the size and causes of the
development gap. "
Do you think that philosophy is an activity for old men in sandals
with long white beards? Or people who sit under trees and wait to
be struck on the head by apples? If so, then you owe it to yourself
to explore the insights of this book. In conversational yet artful
prose, James H. Hall reveals the many ways that you can actually
enjoy and use philosophy in the course of your everyday experience.
Doing philosophy involves critically examining key concepts,
presuppositions and implications that are in play across the entire
range of human inquiry. Practically Profound introduces the
enterprise in three basic areas: knowledge and belief
(epistemology), human nature (ontology) and the good life (ethics).
Emphasizing experience-based arguments, the book demonstrates
techniques that readers of all ages can use to enhance their own
understanding of themselves and their world. This book is ideally
suited to any introductory course in philosophy that takes a
problems-based approach, as well as to general readers interested
in putting philosophy to work in their everyday lives.
Do you think that philosophy is an activity for old men in sandals
with long white beards? Or people who sit under trees and wait to
be struck on the head by apples? If so, then you owe it to yourself
to explore the insights of this book. In conversational yet artful
prose, James H. Hall reveals the many ways that you can actually
enjoy and use philosophy in the course of your everyday experience.
Doing philosophy involves critically examining key concepts,
presuppositions and implications that are in play across the entire
range of human inquiry. Practically Profound introduces the
enterprise in three basic areas: knowledge and belief
(epistemology), human nature (ontology) and the good life (ethics).
Emphasizing experience-based arguments, the book demonstrates
techniques that readers of all ages can use to enhance their own
understanding of themselves and their world. This book is ideally
suited to any introductory course in philosophy that takes a
problems-based approach, as well as to general readers interested
in putting philosophy to work in their everyday lives.
Patterned after the first volume published in 1964, The UFO
Evidence, Volume II is much anticipated by the research community.
The book reports 30 years of UFO sightings since 1964 with related
data and descriptive features organized by category. Among the
topics discussed are the now strongly established patterns of UFO
sightings, the growing evidence worldwide that UFOs represent
someone's technology, the history of government sponsored UFO
investigations, and political and human responses to UFO sightings.
The master chronology is an incredibly complete listing, which also
refers the reader to pertinent sections in the book for fuller
descriptions.
During the Civil War women did a lot more than keep the home fires
burning. Expanding on his pioneering ""Patriots in Disguise"",
Richard Hall has now produced the most accurate and up-to-date
survey available of women who were determined to serve their nation
in that time of crisis. Drawing on a wealth of regimental
histories, newspaper archives, and a host of previously unreported
accounts, Hall shows that women served in more capacities and in
greater number - perhaps several thousand - than has previously
been known. They served in the infantry, cavalry, and artillery and
as spies, scouts, saboteurs, smugglers, and frontline nurses. From
all walks of life, they followed husbands and lovers into battle,
often in male disguise that remained undiscovered until they were
wounded (or gave birth), and endured the same hardships and dangers
as did their male counterparts. Hall presents the most complete
portrait yet available of these courageous women - including Sarah
Bradbury, Lizzie Compton, Frances Hook, and Confederate spy Loreta
Janeta Velazquez - many of whom earned the praise of the male
soldiers they served with and rose through the ranks to become
sergeants, even officers. Through his investigation of specific
case histories, he has authenticated many previously undocumented
reports while debunking myths and exposing previously published
errors about the subject. The book also includes a biographical
directory of nearly 400 women participants and dozens of Civil War
documents attesting to women's role in the war. As a new synthesis
and critical appraisal, ""Women on the Civil War Battlefront"" is a
richly anecdotal work that unearths a hidden history and opens a
new window on women's lives in the nineteenth century. These women
were determined to serve, and Hall's research confirms that they
did so in significant numbers - and with distinction.
A thoroughly documented account of the 1967 guerrilla challenge
in Bolivia, this volume reconstructs events leading up to, during,
and after the defeat of the insurgency. Against the background of
the 1960s' attempt to extend Cuban influence throughout Latin
America, the book offers an analysis of trends in Bolivian politics
from 1952 to 1967. General Prado then evaluates the geographical
setting of the insurgency, guerrilla preparations, and the Bolivian
response. Prado identifies key strategic errors, including Che
Guevara's failure to capture peasant support, and analyzes Che's
own theories. Military historians will find no sensational
revelations here but, instead, previously unknown details that form
a concise reconstruction of "The Defeat of Che Guevara."
Recently retired from the Bolivian Army, Prado avoids partisan
tones and provides an unusually balanced account of the 1967
guerrilla insurgency in Bolivia. A four-part volume, Part I
presents a thorough discussion of the international, national, and
military climate. Part II assesses the geographical setting. Part
III details operations from preparations to defeat. The volume
concludes with a thorough evaluation of the insurgency--causes for
its failure, an analysis of Che Guevara's theories, and the
Bolivian army's mistakes.
During the past few decades, the interest of economists in the
sources of long-term economic growth has led an increasing number
of them to focus on the role of innovation in creating that growth.
Although some researchers have always been interested in this
topic, the groundbreaking work of Solow (1957), Nelson (1959) and
Arrow (1962) made many other economists recognize the central role
played by innovation in almost all spheres of economic activity.
The Economics and Econometrics of Innovation presents a valuable
overview of the work of the world's most renowned experts in the
field of innovation and technical change. It collects 22
outstanding contributions that reflect the results of the vast,
worldwide research efforts and remind us of the importance of
economic incentives in shaping and directing innovative activities.
The volume presents an edited selection of papers that were first
presented at the 10th International ADRES conference. One
particular goal of this book is to bring out the complementary
nature of the various approaches to innovation, and to facilitate
in-depth dialogues both between microeconomists and
macroeconomists, and between theoreticians and econometricians.
General topics that are considered range from the economy-wide
effects of innovation on growth and employment to the variation of
individual firm innovative performance; from the analysis of
networks and standardization to the role of intellectual property
rights and the assessment of knowledge spillovers. Besides the
wealth of information presented in the chapters, readers of this
volume will also appreciate the value of examining a single
question from different angles and by using different methods.
Recent research on the economics of innovation has acknowledged the
importance of path dependence and networks in the evolution of
economies and the diffusion of new techniques, products, and
processes. These are topics pioneered by Paul A. David, one of the
world's leading scholars in the economics of innovation. This
outstanding collection provides a fitting tribute to the diversity
and depth of Paul David's contributions. The papers included range
from simulation models of the evolution of market structure in the
presence of innovation, through historical investigations of
knowledge networks and empirical analysis of contemporary networks,
to the analysis of the diffusion of innovations using simulation
and analytic models and of the diffusion of knowledge using patent
data. With an emphasis on simulation models, data analysis, and
historical evidence, this book will be required reading for
researchers in innovation economics and regional development as
well as economists, sociologists, and historians of innovation and
intellectual property.
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(1)
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Discovery Miles 4 590
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