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Mediation is one of the most important management strategies in
international relations, yet it has been the focus of relatively
little scholarship. International mediation may involve private
individuals, academic scholars, official government
representatives, regional organizations, small or large states,
transnational and international organizations, and yet the nature
and consequences of such variation have yet to be examined
systematically. The purpose of this book is to analyze the
mediating efforts of these, and to consider their contributions to
international peace and security.
This book presents various perspectives on the environmental
aspects of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA),
including the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation
(NAAEC). Among the issues discussed are the environmental
regulations of the NAFTA nations and Chile, as well as the
environmental implications of conducting cross-border business.
These topics are addressed in an interdisciplinary manner, focusing
on legal, economic, social, political and scientific issues, with
contributions from American, Canadian, Mexican and Chilean authors.
The book is invaluable as it provides a broad outlook on
multifaceted environmental issues in a single volume.
This book is the third volume in our NAFTA Law and Policy
series, which offers high-quality studies on different aspects of
NAFTA, including legal analysis and commentary on the Agreement.
The numerous areas covered by the series include NAFTA topics as
diverse as agriculture, dispute settlement, intellectual property
rights, investment and labour.
There are investment aspects of the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) which considerably enhance the opportunities for
foreign investment among the signatories, while at the same time
improving the security of such investment. NAFTA reflects the
Parties' recognition that liberalization of host country investment
restrictions is as important as the elimination of trade barriers.
With the assistance of such high-calibre contributors as Roberto
Mayorga, Kent S. Foster, Preston Brown and Dr. Jorge Witker, this
book analyzes both the advantages and disadvantages of this policy
upon the investment climate within the countries of the various
signatories. This book is the second volume in Kluwer's "NAFTA Law
and Policy Series", publishing studies on different aspects of
NAFTA, including legal analysis and commentary on the Agreement.
Among the numerous areas that are to be covered in the series are
topics as diverse as agriculture, dispute settlement, environment,
intellectual property rights, investment and labour.
Peptide and Peptidomimetic Therapeutics: From Bench to Beside
offers applied, evidence-based instruction on developing and
applying peptide therapeutics in disease treatment, driving drug
discovery, and improving patient care. Here, researchers,
clinicians and students will find tools to harness the full power
of peptides and peptidomimetics and improve bioavailability,
stability, efficiency and selectivity of new therapeutics and their
application in treatment plans. More than 20 leaders in the field
share their approaches for identifying and advancing peptide and
peptidomimetic therapeutics. Topics examined run from "bench to
bedside," beginning with fundamental peptide science,
protein-protein interactions and peptide synthesis. Later chapters
examine modes for peptide drug delivery, including cell penetration
peptide and peptidomimetic delivery, as well as the targeting of
specific disease types, peptide therapeutics as applied to
infectious disease, cancer, metabolic disorders, neurodegenerative
disorders, and skin disorders, and antiparasitic and
immunosuppressive peptidomimetics.
This book provides a guide to becoming an empowered citizen,
capable of achieving success when advocating with local government.
Based on interviews with mayors, together with documentary
evidence, analyses of public meetings, and the author's own
experience of advocacy, volunteering on city committees, and work
on political campaigns, it describes how to advocate with local
government officials, whom to contact, what to say when and where,
and how to locate the facts, figures, and stories that can lend
credence to an advocacy campaign. Guided by the ideas that
persuasion efforts can succeed, are not difficult to undertake, and
are in fact appreciated by public officials; that the system is
open and that citizens have a fair chance of advancing their point
of view; and that democracy depends upon citizen engagement, it
presents concrete case studies in order to illustrate the guidance
provided. With advice on how to organize and implement a successful
advocacy campaign at a local level-and what to avoid-Persuading
Local Government provides an antidote to the alienation of national
politics, showing that local efforts at persuasion are meaningful
and effect change on matters that affect people's everyday lives.
This book provides a guide to becoming an empowered citizen,
capable of achieving success when advocating with local government.
Based on interviews with mayors, together with documentary
evidence, analyses of public meetings, and the author's own
experience of advocacy, volunteering on city committees, and work
on political campaigns, it describes how to advocate with local
government officials, whom to contact, what to say when and where,
and how to locate the facts, figures, and stories that can lend
credence to an advocacy campaign. Guided by the ideas that
persuasion efforts can succeed, are not difficult to undertake, and
are in fact appreciated by public officials; that the system is
open and that citizens have a fair chance of advancing their point
of view; and that democracy depends upon citizen engagement, it
presents concrete case studies in order to illustrate the guidance
provided. With advice on how to organize and implement a successful
advocacy campaign at a local level-and what to avoid-Persuading
Local Government provides an antidote to the alienation of national
politics, showing that local efforts at persuasion are meaningful
and effect change on matters that affect people's everyday lives.
The analytic literature has heretofore been silent about the issues
inherent in the nuclear threat. As a groundbreaking exploration of
new psychological terrain, Psychoanalysis and the Nuclear Threat
will function as a source book for what, it is hoped, will be the
continuing effort of analysts and other mental health professionals
to explore and engage in-depth nuclear issues. This volume provides
panoramic coverage of the dynamic and clinical considerations that
follow from life in the nuclear age. Of special interest are
chapters deling with the developmental consequences of the nuclear
threat in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood, and those
exploring the technical issues raised by the occurrence in analytic
and psychotherapeutic hours of material related to the nuclear
threat. Additional chapters bring a psychoanalytic perspective to
bear on such issues as the need to have enemies; silence as the
"real crime"; love, work, and survival in the nuclear age; the
relationship of the nuclear threat to issues of "mourning and
melancholia"; apocalyptic fantasies; the paranoid process;
considerations of the possible impact of gender on the nuclear
threat; and the application of psychoanalytic thinking to nuclear
arms strategy. Finally, the volume includes the first case report
in the English language - albeit a brief psychotherapy - involving
the treatment of a Hiroshima survivor. A noteworthy event in
psychoanalytic publishing, Psychoanalysis and the Nuclear Threat
betokens analytic engagement with the most pressing political and
moral issue of our time, a cultivating of Freud's "soft voice of
the intellect" in an area where it is desperately needed.
Behind the Scenes in Social Research discusses the informal,
adaptive, and real-life process of doing social science research.
It complements the material in standard methods texts that describe
the basics-how to choose topics and ways of obtaining and analyzing
data-but in doing so miss out on many of the obstacles and
practicalities of doing research. Researchers may find themselves
adrift when they start their research and discover that what
confronts them doesn't precisely match exactly what is described in
the basic textbooks, such as the obstacles that frequently occur,
the logistical matters that must be handled, and the improvisations
in research design and data gathering techniques that successful
projects require. This book covers this material, while also paying
attention to the ways in which the personal characteristics of
those doing the research affect how projects are designed and data
gathered. In addition, it explores the manner in which doing
research affects the researchers themselves, affecting self-images,
altering political or social views, or providing skills that extend
beyond the research enterprise. Based on the author's own
experiences and interviews with senior researchers in a variety of
social science fields, Behind the Scenes in Social Research
explores the practical problems that arise in undertaking a
research project while showing how these problems can be overcome
through perseverance and improvisation. It will therefore appeal to
scholars and students across the social science with interests in
research methods and the practical issues that arise during any
research project.
Renewing Hope builds upon narratives provided by leaders of
community-based development organizations (CBDOs) to describe how
they bring about affordable, quality housing, commercial
opportunities, and employment within poor areas. The book
illustrates both the obstacles CBDOs face and how these obstacles
are overcome, in part by leveraging resources for social change
projects from foundations, government and intermediaries. Guiding
the effort of the developmental activists is an organic theory that
explains what can and should be accomplished. The material extends
new institutionalism models of inter-organizational behavior.
Behind the Scenes in Social Research discusses the informal,
adaptive, and real-life process of doing social science research.
It complements the material in standard methods texts that describe
the basics-how to choose topics and ways of obtaining and analyzing
data-but in doing so miss out on many of the obstacles and
practicalities of doing research. Researchers may find themselves
adrift when they start their research and discover that what
confronts them doesn't precisely match exactly what is described in
the basic textbooks, such as the obstacles that frequently occur,
the logistical matters that must be handled, and the improvisations
in research design and data gathering techniques that successful
projects require. This book covers this material, while also paying
attention to the ways in which the personal characteristics of
those doing the research affect how projects are designed and data
gathered. In addition, it explores the manner in which doing
research affects the researchers themselves, affecting self-images,
altering political or social views, or providing skills that extend
beyond the research enterprise. Based on the author's own
experiences and interviews with senior researchers in a variety of
social science fields, Behind the Scenes in Social Research
explores the practical problems that arise in undertaking a
research project while showing how these problems can be overcome
through perseverance and improvisation. It will therefore appeal to
scholars and students across the social science with interests in
research methods and the practical issues that arise during any
research project.
It was just over 12 years ago that we first sat down together to
talk about psychological traps. In the relative calm of late
afternoons, feet draped casually over the seedy furnishings of the
Tufts psychology department, we entertained each other with
personal anecdotes about old cars, times spent lost on hold, and
the Shakespearean concerns of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, Lord
and Lady Macbeth, and other notables. Eventually, informed by our
many illustrations and the excitement that their repeated telling
engendered in the two of us, we began to move more formally into
trap analysis. How do you know a trap when you see one? What are
the shared characteristics of all psychological traps, regardless
of origin, scope, or complexity? What are the key conceptual
elements in any effort to differentiate among the traps of the
world? What factors make us more or less apt to fall prey to
entrapment? These were some of the questions that arose during
these initial meetings. A series of weekly meetings stretched over
the ensuing years-interrupted temporarily by various exigencies-and
led eventually to a research program that grew to involve a number
of students and faculty colleagues. At the time, of course, we did
not regard our work as a "research program"; rather, even as our
experiments proceeded to answer two burning questions at a time,
they managed to raise three or four new issues that we had not
anticipated before.
Mediation is one of the most important management strategies in
international relations, yet it has been the focus of relatively
little scholarship. International mediation may involve private
individuals, academic scholars, official government
representatives, regional organizations, small or large states,
transnational and international organizations, and yet the nature
and consequences of such variation have yet to be examined
systematically. The purpose of this book is to analyze the
mediating efforts of these, and to consider their contributions to
international peace and security.
This book portrays how small, geographically dispersed, and
progressive social change and social service organizations working
within a coalition can influence national-level social policies.
Based on extensive empirical research on two national organizations
and their local affiliates, one focusing on affordable housing and
the other working to protect lower-income communities, this book
shows the ways in which professionally staffed organizations that
coordinate coalitions come about, and describes their work to
mobilize coalition members to lobby and advocate, providing
information, analysis and instruction to facilitate such action
and, in so doing, becoming the public voice for the social change
efforts of coalitions. Advocacy for Social Change details the
characteristics of these organizations that the author has labeled
as focal catalytic coalition organizations and then provides
numerous examples of campaigns led by them on affordable housing
and economic justice; campaigns that illustrate tactics that other
social change organizations can emulate. As such, it will appeal to
scholars of sociology with interests in social problems, social
action, political sociology, urban studies, community development
and organizing while extending the literature on interest group
lobbying.
This book portrays how small, geographically dispersed, and
progressive social change and social service organizations working
within a coalition can influence national-level social policies.
Based on extensive empirical research on two national organizations
and their local affiliates, one focusing on affordable housing and
the other working to protect lower-income communities, this book
shows the ways in which professionally staffed organizations that
coordinate coalitions come about, and describes their work to
mobilize coalition members to lobby and advocate, providing
information, analysis and instruction to facilitate such action
and, in so doing, becoming the public voice for the social change
efforts of coalitions. Advocacy for Social Change details the
characteristics of these organizations that the author has labeled
as focal catalytic coalition organizations and then provides
numerous examples of campaigns led by them on affordable housing
and economic justice; campaigns that illustrate tactics that other
social change organizations can emulate. As such, it will appeal to
scholars of sociology with interests in social problems, social
action, political sociology, urban studies, community development
and organizing while extending the literature on interest group
lobbying.
Whether it's software, a cell phone, or a refrigerator, your
customer wants?no, expects?your product to be easy to use. This
fully revised handbook provides clear, step-by-step guidelines to
help you test your product for usability. Completely updated with
current industry best practices, it can give you that all-important
marketplace advantage: products that perform the way users expect.
You?ll learn to recognize factors that limit usability, decide
where testing should occur, set up a test plan to assess goals for
your product's usability, and more.
Using in-depth qualitative interviews, authors Herbert J. Rubin and
Irene S. Rubin have researched topics ranging from community
redevelopment programs to the politics of budgeting and been
energized by the depth, thoroughness, and credibility of what was
revealed. They describe in-depth qualitative interviewing from
beginning to end, from its underlying philosophy and assumptions to
project design, analysis and write up. "This book is exactly what I
was looking for in that it covers interviewing and analysis in
depth."-Daphne John, Oberlin College "Students leave this book
fully informed of the nuances and complexity of interviewing as
well as excited about the promise interview research findings
offer."-Hannah Britton, University of Kansas "The authors' focus on
the reflective process, question development, and procedural steps
associated with qualitative research is rich and thorough."-Tracy
M. Lara, Kent State University
Twenty-eight selections from the writings of some of the best-known
American-Jewish novelists, dramatists, critics, and historians span
the social and cultural history of American Jews in the twentieth
century. Often joyous, occasionally tragic, they provide a
fascinating record-from immigration to assimilation, from life in
the ghetto to the current movement by many to recapture their
Jewish identity. At once personal and historical, the selections
are poignant and moving testimonies to the perseverance of the
American-Jewish people.
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