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First published in 1982, Intrusions examines a wide range of cases
down through history, showing how ordinary people have regarded the
paranormal in contrast with 'official' attitudes, and how society
as a whole has attempted to deal with happenings that are
inexplicable in terms of current scientific or religious theory. He
discusses questions such as What did Shakespeare's audience feel
about Hamlet's father's ghost? Why did a renewed interest in magic
follow 'the age of enlightenment?' How did Victorian science
respond to spiritualism, and why has scientific psychical research,
when it finally came, encountered continued opposition? Drawing on
reports and accounts of very kind, Mr. Evans gives an authentic
account of prevailing attitudes, focussing for the first time
directly on the experiences and points of view of ordinary people.
He demonstrates that society has been, and still is, badly served
by the intellectual establishment in matters relating to the
paranormal. Although there are signs that the situation is
improving, there is still a dismaying degree of reluctance even to
investigate, let alone accept, these phenomena, yet they continue
to occur, and people continue to seek explanations for them. This
book will be of interest to anyone interested in the mysteries of
the paranormal as well as to students of parapsychology, history
and literature.
At a time when many around the world are fleeing their homes,
seeking refugee protection has become a game of chance. Partly to
blame is the law that governs how refugee status decision-makers
resolve their doubts. This long-neglected branch of refugee law has
been growing in the dark, with little guidance from the Refugee
Convention and little attention from scholars. By looking closely
at the Canadian jurisprudence, Hilary Evans Cameron provides the
first full account of what this law is trying to accomplish in a
refugee hearing. She demonstrates how a hole in the law's normative
foundations is contributing to the dysfunction of one of the
world's most respected refugee determination systems, and may well
be undermining refugee protection across the globe. The author uses
her findings to propose a new legal model of refugee status
decision-making.
At a time when many around the world are fleeing their homes,
seeking refugee protection has become a game of chance. Partly to
blame is the law that governs how refugee status decision-makers
resolve their doubts. This long-neglected branch of refugee law has
been growing in the dark, with little guidance from the Refugee
Convention and little attention from scholars. By looking closely
at the Canadian jurisprudence, Hilary Evans Cameron provides the
first full account of what this law is trying to accomplish in a
refugee hearing. She demonstrates how a hole in the law's normative
foundations is contributing to the dysfunction of one of the
world's most respected refugee determination systems, and may well
be undermining refugee protection across the globe. The author uses
her findings to propose a new legal model of refugee status
decision-making.
This is a new release of the original 1961 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
How Do They Do That? A young man of Dublin walks past a row of
streetlights at night--and they go out, one by one, as he passes.
An engineer in Woodville, Washington, is stopped by police and his
car searched to nd out what he's doing to their streetlights. An
Australian in the entertainment industry parks his car in a parking
lot, and the light above him goes out-until the following evening
when he parks in precisely the same space and the light comes on
again. And that's not all. When a guest in a restaurant in Athens,
Greece, asks that the music be turned down, they refuse--whereupon
she "kills" the restaurant's electricity and they eat the rest of
their meal by candlelight. Other people affect traf c lights,
computers, railway crossings... This is Street Light Interference
(SLI). Once considered to be folklore--something that happened to a
friend of a friend--today it is recognized as a scienti c enigma
with implications for our knowledge of the universe, including
ourselves. In this, the rst full-length book on SLI, we hear from
some of the hundreds of SLIders who have reported their uncanny
experiences, and consider the wider implications of this
fascinating phenomenon.
From fads, crazes, and manias to collective delusions, scares,
panics, and mass hysterias, history is replete with examples of
remarkable social behavior. Many are fueled by fear and
uncertainty; others are driven by hope and expectation. For others
still, the causes are more obscure. This massive collection of
extraordinary social behaviors spans more than two millennia, and
attempts to place many of the episodes within their greater
historical and cultural context. Perhaps the most well known
example of unusual collective behavior occurred in 1938, when a
million or more Americans were frightened or panicked after
listening to a realistic radio drama about a Martian invasion of
New Jersey, based on an adaptation of the H.G. Wells novel "War of
the Worlds." Less known but equally remarkable scares based on
Wells' book occurred in Chile in 1944 (when Army units were
mobilized), in Ecuador in 1949 (when riots broke out, leaving more
than a dozen dead), as well as in Buffalo in 1968, Rhode Island in
1974, and Europe in 1988 and 1998. The modern civilized world is by
no means immune to such peculiar episodes. In the late 20th
century, scores of people in the U.S. and Europe were wrongly
incarcerated following claims of Satanic ritual abuse by
authorities untutored in False Memory Syndrome. This episode
recalls the European witch terror of the late Middle Ages, when
innocent people were tortured and executed for consorting with the
Devil based on the flimsiest of evidence. OUTBREAK THE ENCYCLOPEDIA
OF EXTRAORDINARY SOCIAL BEHAVIOR is an authoritative reference on a
broad range of topics: collective behavior, deviance, social and
perceptual psychology, sociology, history, folklore, religious
studies, political science, social anthropology, gender studies,
critical thinking, and mental health. Never before have so many
sources been brought together on the mesmerizing topic of
collective behavior.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
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