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Showing 1 - 25 of
95 matches in All Departments
Finlay is going on a Nessie hunt. While visiting his Gran, who
lives beside Loch Ness, Finlay is determined to get proof that
Nessie, the famous Loch Ness Monster, really does exist. Finlay's
Gran might believe him but his big sister Sarah keeps telling him
there's no such thing. Until they spot a monster-ish shape under
the water ... There's no such thing as Nessie: is there? Travel to
the shores of Loch Ness with Kirsteen Harris-Jones's bright,
playful illustrations of the Scottish landscape accompanied by
Chani McBain's fun monster-hunting story.
Ollie the osprey loves to swoop into the water and catch fish. But
once he's caught them, he's useless at throwing them! And if he
can't throw a delicious fish to Isla, she'll never become his
friend. Rory the otter says he can help Ollie practise his
throwing. Full of fun sounds, this is a brilliant story about doing
what you love, by interactive storyteller Emily Dodd, with gentle
illustrations of a host of loveable Scottish birds and animals in
the picturesque Scottish Highlands.
Bagpipe the Black Grouse loves admiring his glorious red eyebrows
and his magnificent straight tail feathers. He feels sorry for his
friend, Squeaker the Wood Mouse, with his boring brown fur and
bendy tail. But Squeaker's help, along with brown-ness and
bendy-ness, might be just what Bagpipe needs when he gets into some
serious fox trouble. Starring two of Scotland's best-loved
residents, an endangered black grouse and a wood mouse, this is a
funny and heart-warming tale about valuing difference, from the
author of Can't-Dance-Cameron.
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Willow the Wildcat (Paperback)
Lynne Rickards; Illustrated by Kirsteen Harris-Jones
1
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R211
R172
Discovery Miles 1 720
Save R39 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Willow the wildcat kitten and her brother Corrie live in a cosy den
in the forest with their mum. But then disaster strikes when a nosy
sheepdog collapses their den. Can the kittens stop bickering long
to learn how to work together and find a warm, safe new home?
Written in Lynne Rickards' signature rhyme, this charming tale of
two siblings learning to appreciate each other and work as a team
features dynamic watercolour illustrations of Scottish wildlife and
two wildcat kittens, which are endangered in Scotland. From the
author of best-selling Skye the Puffling and Rowan the Red
Squirrel, Willow the Wildcat brings the beauty of the Scottish
Highlands and its animal inhabitants to life.
This book presents an academically rigorous yet practical guide to
efforts to understand how knowledge, policy and power interact to
promote or prevent change. It offers a power analysis perspective
on the knowledge-policy process, illustrated with rich empirical
examples from the field of international development, combined with
practical guidance on the implications of such an approach. It
provides ways to identify and address problems that have hampered
previous attempts to improve the space between knowledge and
policy; such as difficulties in analysing political context,
persistent asymmetric relationships between actors, ignorance of
the contributions of different types of knowledge, and
misconceptions of the roles played by intermediary organisations.
Most importantly, the book gives readers the ability to develop
strategies for negotiating the complexity of the knowledge-policy
interface more effectively, so as to contribute to policy
dialogues, influence policy change, and implement policies and
programmes more effectively. The authors focus on the dynamics of
the knowledge-policy interface in international development;
offering novel theoretical insights and methodological approaches
that are applicable to a broader array of policy arenas and their
audiences, including academics, practitioners and students.
If you think that pollution is not your concern, then like little
Gertrude you've got lots to learn. She lies in her treehouse like
the laziest lump, and shouts from her hammock across the whole
dump: "What on EARTH are you saying? Why can't you see? It's not
that I'm lazy, it's just not up to me!"
This book presents an academically rigorous yet practical guide to
efforts to understand how knowledge, policy and power interact to
promote or prevent change.It offers a power analysis perspective on
the knowledge-policy process, illustrated with rich empirical
examples from the field of international development, combined with
practical guidance on the implications of such an approach. It
provides ways to identify and address problems that have hampered
previous attempts to improve the space between knowledge and
policy; such as difficulties in analysing political context,
persistent asymmetric relationships between actors, ignorance of
the contributions of different types of knowledge, and
misconceptions of the roles played by intermediary organisations.
Most importantly, the book gives readers the ability to develop
strategies for negotiating the complexity of the knowledge-policy
interface more effectively, so as to contribute to policy
dialogues, influence policy change, and implement policies and
programmes more effectively.The authors focus on the dynamics of
the knowledge-policy interface in international development;
offering novel theoretical insights and methodological approaches
that are applicable to a broader array of policy arenas and their
audiences, including academics, practitioners and students.
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Blanka (Paperback)
D.M. Mullan; Illustrated by Kirsteen Harris-Jones
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R207
R147
Discovery Miles 1 470
Save R60 (29%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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BLANKA VON FROCK When you want more but you have all you need, it's
Blanka von Frock, whose tale you should read. She bullies her
sisters in their frozen windmill, and her greedy demands give the
village a chill: "I want what I want and I want it today, so listen
up sisters and do as I say" D.M. Mullan's Curious Tales D.M.
Mullan's Curious Tales is a series of peculiar modern fables from
author D.M. Mullan and illustrator Kirsteen Harris-Jones. With a
classic rhyming style and wonderfully quirky illustrations, each
book centres around a unique little individual and tells their
story all whilst being part of a wider, interconnected, world.
This intellectual biography covers the trajectory of Bateson’s
career, from his anthropological work in Bali alongside his wife,
Margaret Mead, to his contributions to family therapy in the United
States, and to studies of recursion as a feature of communication
patterns in both the human and in the animal world. Layers of
feedback with their many differing contexts, highlight the presence
of meaning in social relations in contrast to that absence of
meaning, purposefully proposed, within information theory.
Throughout the human and in the animal world, recursion of feedback
accounts for grasp of patterns, their difference, and with ability
to communicate, enable transduction of perceptions of difference.
Bateson’s insistence on feedback and communication re-frames many
aspects of culture, psychology, biology, and evolution. His legacy
is recognized as an important precursor to the formation of a new
science called Biosemiotics. Harries-Jones argues that Bateson
turns conventional causality upside down through showing how
humanity’s perceptions, as with perceptions of all sentient
beings, are anticipative. All sentient beings abduct from recursive
patterns, rather than relying on linear evidence gathered about
time/space movements of objects. Thus circular pattering provides
clearer perceptions of the difference between sustainable
creativity and current biocide, between our appreciation of
nature’s aesthetics and time/space ‘games of power’ which
underlie so many social and biological theories.
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