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More Than That (Hardcover)
Anthony J Alexandre; Edited by Nicole Fegan; Cover design or artwork by Nuno Moreira
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R576
R479
Discovery Miles 4 790
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Wellbeing is foundational to citizens' individual and collective
ability to acknowledge, address, and alleviate ongoing struggles,
shared risks, and the unprecedented challenges of our time. A
holistic focus on wellness across campus communities is timely and
important, given that national and global justice movements are
calling upon post-secondary institutions to address the ways in
which education systems have been reproducing dominant narratives,
reinforcing systemic discrimination, and retaliating against
education leaders who work to disrupt structural inequalities.
Leadership Wellness and Mental Health Concerns in Higher Education
offers diverse perspectives about whether and how campus leaders
around the world are sustaining and advancing health and wellness
in unprecedented times and amplifies diverse voices in the
exploration of how to advance individual and collective wellbeing
in higher education. Covering a wide range of topics such as stress
management and burnout, this reference work is ideal for
academicians, scholars, researchers, administrators, practitioners,
instructors, and students.
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Presence (Hardcover)
J. Alexander Sider, Isaac S. Villegas
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R1,062
R864
Discovery Miles 8 640
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This volume deals with the history of organized labor in all of
the countries of the English-speaking West Indies. It is the fourth
in a series of histories of the organized labor movement in Latin
America and the Caribbean. Alexander traces the countries' origins,
early struggles, experiences with collective bargaining, and the
key roles in the politics of their respective countries,
particularly their participation in the struggle for
self-government and independence. He also examines the
international organizations of trade unions in the West Indian
area, and their association with the hemisphere and worldwide labor
groups.
This work is based on the author's personal contacts with these
labor movements and their leaders, as well as on printed material,
including collective contracts, histories of some of the labor
groups and other similar sources. Scholars and students of labor
relations, economic and social development, and those interested in
the history of the West Indies and Latin America will enjoy this
book.
"Understanding Complex Urban Systems" takes as its point of
departure the insight that the challenges of global urbanization
and the complexity of urban systems cannot be understood let alone
managed by sectoral and disciplinary approaches alone. But while
there has recently been significant progress in broadening and
refining the methodologies for the quantitative modeling of complex
urban systems, in deepening the theoretical understanding of cities
as complex systems, or in illuminating the implications for urban
planning, there is still a lack of well-founded conceptual thinking
on the methodological foundations and the strategies of modeling
urban complexity across the disciplines.
Bringing together experts from the fields of urban and spatial
planning, ecology, urban geography, real estate analysis,
organizational cybernetics, stochastic optimization, and literary
studies, as well as specialists in various systems approaches and
in transdisciplinary methodologies of urban analysis, the volume
seeks to advance the discussion on multidisciplinary approaches to
urban modeling. While engaging with the state of the art in their
respective fields, the contributions are specifically written for
both experts from a broad range of disciplines as well as for urban
practitioners who feel the need for new approaches given the
uncertainty of current developments.
This book consists of notes of conversations by one of America's
leading Latin Americanists, as well as his correspondence with more
than two dozen presidents of the Central American republics,
Mexico, Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic. In some cases,
there are numerous conversations and letters with individual chief
executives; in other instances, there are only individual
conversations or notes on talks which the author heard. Each entry
reflects the thinking of the person involved at the time of the
interview or letter and many shed light on the activities of the
individual presidents. Before the items dealing with each
particular country, Alexander provides introductory notes, giving
information on the individuals dealt with in that country as well
as the circumstances of the letters and conversations. These
materials, together with those contained in earlier volumes dealing
with South America, provide students of 20th-century Latin America
unique insight into its political leadership and its history from
the 1940s onward.
This book deals with an information-driven approach to plan
materials discovery and design, iterative learning. The authors
present contrasting but complementary approaches, such as those
based on high throughput calculations, combinatorial experiments or
data driven discovery, together with machine-learning methods.
Similarly, statistical methods successfully applied in other
fields, such as biosciences, are presented. The content spans from
materials science to information science to reflect the
cross-disciplinary nature of the field. A perspective is presented
that offers a paradigm (codesign loop for materials design) to
involve iteratively learning from experiments and calculations to
develop materials with optimum properties. Such a loop requires the
elements of incorporating domain materials knowledge, a database of
descriptors (the genes), a surrogate or statistical model developed
to predict a given property with uncertainties, performing adaptive
experimental design to guide the next experiment or calculation and
aspects of high throughput calculations as well as experiments. The
book is about manufacturing with the aim to halving the time to
discover and design new materials. Accelerating discovery relies on
using large databases, computation, and mathematics in the material
sciences in a manner similar to the way used to in the Human Genome
Initiative. Novel approaches are therefore called to explore the
enormous phase space presented by complex materials and processes.
To achieve the desired performance gains, a predictive capability
is needed to guide experiments and computations in the most
fruitful directions by reducing not successful trials. Despite
advances in computation and experimental techniques, generating
vast arrays of data; without a clear way of linkage to models, the
full value of data driven discovery cannot be realized. Hence,
along with experimental, theoretical and computational materials
science, we need to add a "fourth leg'' to our toolkit to make the
"Materials Genome'' a reality, the science of Materials
Informatics.
Alexander is among the most experienced observers of Latin
American politics and has been an active correspondent with major
figures of the region for decades. In this volume, he provides
interview transcripts and letters from most of the recent
presidents of Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela. With
some of the correspondence and interviews extending over a
considerable period of time, the shifting views and attitudes as
well as the comments on other key players makes for fascinating
insights into the politics of Latin America.
This volume is a continuation of Alexander's earlier "The ABC
Presidents "(Praeger, 1992). This material is of considerable
importance to political scientists and other Latin American Studies
researchers.
A major question in studies of aesthetic expression is how we can
understand and explain similarities and differences among different
forms of representation. In the current volume, this question is
addressed through the lens of make-believe theory, a philosophical
theory broadly introduced by two seminal works - Kendall Walton's
Mimesis as Make-Believe and Gregory Currie's The Nature of Fiction,
both published 1990. Since then, make-believe theory has become
central in the philosphical discussion of representation. As a
first of its kind, the current volume comprises 17 detailed studies
of highly different forms of representation, such as novels, plays,
TV-series, role games, computer games, lamentation poetry and
memoirs. The collection contributes to establishing make-believe
theory as a powerful theoretical tool for a wide array of studies
traditionally falling under the humanities umbrella.
Bolivia was the center stage for one of the most important Latin
American social revolutions of the twentieth century, one that
occurred amid a sea of tremendous political instability. The
expansion of organized labor that occurred during the 1920s was met
with multiple government reprisals and was largely curbed by the
Chaco War with Paraguay of 1932-1935. Nevertheless, despite being
compelled to operate illegally, the labor movement found support in
several political parties, the most successful of which was the
Movimiento Nacionalista Revolucionario, a powerhouse in the miners'
federation. Conscious of the remarkable upheavals which punctuated
Bolivian history during the twentieth century, Alexander traces the
relative successes of Bolivia's labor unions, contextualizing their
triumphs and disappointments within the captivating history of
Bolivia's tumultuous political scene. Bolivia was the center stage
for one of the most important Latin American social revolutions of
the twentieth century, one that occurred amid a sea of tremendous
political instability. The expansion of organized labor that
occurred during the 1920s was met with numerous government
reprisals and was largely curbed by the Chaco War with Paraguay of
1932-1935. Nevertheless, despite being compelled to operate
illegally, the labor movement found support in several political
parties, the most successful of which was the Movimiento
Nacionalista Revolucionario, a powerhouse in the miners'
federation. Conscious of the remarkable upheavals which punctuated
Bolivian history during the twentieth century, Alexander traces the
relative successes of Bolivia's labor unions, contextualizing their
triumphs and disappointments within the captivating history of
Bolivia's tumultuous political scene. Alexander explains how the
labor movement evolved in the framework of several political
changes, including: the brief presidency of Major Gualberto
Villarroel which began in December 1943 and lasted only two and a
half years; the Bolivian National Revolution which began on April
9, 1952; the onset of agrarian reform in 1952; the overthrow of the
revolutionary regime in November 1964
In this volume, Alexander sketches the history of organized labor
in the countries of Uruguay and Paraguay. He covers such topics as
the role of organized labor in the economics and politics of these
two countries and their relations with the international labor
movement. It is based on extensive personal contacts of the author
with the labor movements over almost half a century. It may seem
unusual at first to have both of these countries in one volume
because there does not exist anywhere else in Latin America such
historical political disparity between neighboring countries as
that between Uruguay and Paraguay. However, in spite of the
political contrasts, there are certain similarities in the history
of the labor movements of these two republics. In both Uruguay and
Paraguay, the earliest organizations to be founded by the workers
were mutual benefit societies, rather than trade unions. But in
both countries, trade unions which sought to protect their members
against employers began to appear. By the early years of the 20th
century, these unions began to demand that employers negotiate with
them, and there were an increasing number of strikes, attempting to
make these demands effective. There were soon efforts to bring
together the various trade unions into broader local, national, and
international labor organizations.
The first scholarly work to focus exclusively on the roles of
pan-regional and worldwide labor organizations in the labor
movements across the nations of the Caribbean, Central America, and
South America. With a career that covers over a half century,
Robert J. Alexander is perhaps our foremost authority on Latin
American history and politics. In International Labor Organizations
and Organized Labor in Latin America and the Caribbean: A History,
Alexander explores one of the most fascinating and often overlooked
aspects of the Latin American labor scene he has so meticulously
chronicled: the relationships between labor unions within specific
nations, region wide organizations, and organized labor around the
world. Alexander has written many of the cornerstone works on labor
movements within the nations of Latin America, and this is his
first volume to focus on the impact of international unions on
Latin American labor issues. Coverage includes the AFL-offshoot Pan
American Federation of Labor and the CIA-backed AIFLD; the role of
the Russian Union, Profintern; European-based unions like the
anti-Communist/anti-Fascist Postal Telegraph and Telephone
International; and intraregional organizations like the
Confederacion de Trabajadores de America Latina (CTAL)-the first
attempt to form a multinational labor organization exclusively for
the region. Numerous original documents from the various
organizations covered in the book Wide-ranging bibliographic
materials, including original interviews by the author with
numerous people who participated in the various institutions that
are written about in this volume
Alexander surveys the most important dissident movement within
International Communism in the developed world since World War II.
He traces its origins, the issues that differentiated the movement
from Moscow-oriented communism, and shows why the movement had an
attraction for both traditional communists and others of the
left.
Examining the movement by region and then by country, he
describes the appearance and evolution of the Maoist Communist
parties throughout North America, Europe, Japan and Ociania. An
important resource for all scholars and researchers involved with
the history of communism.
The Maoist movement was the most important dissident force within
International Communism in the period following World War II. Based
on first-hand observation as well as the scattered research
available on the Maoist movements, Alexander examines the
circumstances that attracted people to the movement in each country
and the evolution of the movement. Scholars and researchers
interested in Marxism in the developing world will be able to trace
the origins and fate of Maoist groups in Latin America, Albania,
Africa, the Middle East, and Asia.
This volume traces the history of organized labor in the Peru and
Ecuador from its first appearance in the late nineteenth century
until the end of the twentieth century. It discusses the relations
of trade unionism with economic development and politics,
particularly the political tendencies within organized labor. It
also discusses the negative impact on the trade union movement of
the "free-enterprise-free trade" policies of the last decades of
the twentieth century.
Taking a unique approach to studying Russian political culture, this book presents an in-depth analysis of the attitudes and activities of residents in two provincial capitals, Syktyvkar and Kirov. It shows evidence of underlying democracy in popular opinions. It also finds an authoritarian side that is being strengthened by the ongoing crisis of Russia's transition. The author directs a critical eye toward the contemporary research on Russian political culture.
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