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7 matches in All Departments
With the advent of the new health authorities, multifunds and
consortia, it is likely that the GP's professional leadership of
primary care will rapidly become only one of a number of provider
options. This book defines some of the future options for the
organization of primary care. The evolving possible roles of GPs
and practices in these changing circumstances are examined closely.
As the new health authorities come into full legislative force, how
will they deploy the combined financial allocations for primary and
secondary care to support their new capacity to enter into local
contracts? Which health care providers will emerge in this market
place in response to this shift in commissioning power? These are
critical questions for general practice. With contributions from a
variety of sources that reflect the varied origins of
organizational initiatives, this is a book for planners, providers
and purchasers of extended primary care.
Shakespeare has an astonishingly rich and varied performance
tradition in Japan, stretching from the Westernizing and
modernizing ferment of the nineteenth-century Meiji era to the
postmodern performance culture. How has the tradition evolved?
Where is it going? How is it to be accounted for in theatrical and
cultural terms? What does it mean to perform Shakespeare in Japan?
Such questions are raised in this 2001 book's introduction and
pursued in fourteen essays on key aspects, moments and
personalities in the performance tradition. These are followed by
provocative interviews with four leading directors (Deguchi Norio,
Ninagawa Yukio, Suzuki Tadashi and Noda Hideki) and with one
leading performer (Hira Mikijiro). Unlike the very few existing
books on Japanese Shakespeare, this book concentrates on modern and
postmodern theatre, from c.1970, and contains contributions from
both Japanese and Western scholars and theatre practitioners.
Suzuki is Japan's best-known director. He has been internationally
acclaimed for his postmodern adaptations of classics by Nanboku,
Euripides, Shakespeare and Chekhov since the 1970s, including The
Trojan Women, King Lear and Three Sisters and, equally, for his
powerful actor training system, which combines elements of Noh and
Kabuki with Western realism. Inviting artists from around the world
to perform at his Toga and Shizuoka International Festivals, Suzuki
has fostered productive exchanges with Jean-Louis Barrault, Robert
Wilson, Kanze Hisao, Ashikawa Yoko and numerous others. This 2004
book traces Suzuki's rise from Little Theatre director to
international festival celebrity, links his unique Surrealist
dramaturgy with his intercultural training system, and gives
in-depth descriptions of his most acclaimed productions.
Suzuki is Japan's best-known director. He has been internationally
acclaimed for his postmodern adaptations of classics by Nanboku,
Euripides, Shakespeare and Chekhov since the 1970s, including The
Trojan Women, King Lear and Three Sisters and, equally, for his
powerful actor training system, which combines elements of Noh and
Kabuki with Western realism. Inviting artists from around the world
to perform at his Toga and Shizuoka International Festivals, Suzuki
has fostered productive exchanges with Jean-Louis Barrault, Robert
Wilson, Kanze Hisao, Ashikawa Yoko and numerous others. This 2004
book traces Suzuki's rise from Little Theatre director to
international festival celebrity, links his unique Surrealist
dramaturgy with his intercultural training system, and gives
in-depth descriptions of his most acclaimed productions.
In this book, Leslie Small and Ian Carruthers examine in detail the
potentials and limitations of user fees for financing irrigation
operation and maintenance. Both authors have extensive field
experience in irrigation in developing countries and have combined
this experience with simple concepts of economics to examine
possible institutional and financial reforms which would not simply
ask farmers to pay for an inadequate irrigation service, but would
create the potential for significant improvements in the quality of
the service provided. The proposed elements of any such reform are
discussed in depth - a system of user fees covering the recurrent
costs of irrigation; a financially autonomous irrigation agency
that can retain and use the fees to operate and maintain the
irrigation facilities; and a macro policy environment that is not
unduly skewed against the agricultural sector. Written in a style
intended to convey economic perspectives and insights to
non-economists, this book will be essential reading for all those
concerned with the financing and performance of irrigation in
developing countries.
In this book, Leslie Small and Ian Carruthers examine in detail the
potentials and limitations of user fees for financing irrigation
operation and maintenance. Both authors have extensive field
experience in irrigation in developing countries and have combined
this experience with simple concepts of economics to examine
possible institutional and financial reforms which would not simply
ask farmers to pay for an inadequate irrigation service, but would
create the potential for significant improvements in the quality of
the service provided. The proposed elements of any such reform are
discussed in depth - a system of user fees covering the recurrent
costs of irrigation; a financially autonomous irrigation agency
that can retain and use the fees to operate and maintain the
irrigation facilities; and a macro policy environment that is not
unduly skewed against the agricultural sector. Written in a style
intended to convey economic perspectives and insights to
non-economists, this book will be essential reading for all those
concerned with the financing and performance of irrigation in
developing countries.
This is a collection of fourteen essays on particular topics from over one hundred years of Shakespeare performance in Japan. In addition, there are four interviews with leading directors and one with a leading perfomer. Unlike the few existing books on Japanese Shakespeare, this book concentrates on modern and postmodern theater, from c. 1970, and contains contributions from both Japanese and Western scholars and theater practitioners.
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