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This book addresses one of the most challenging problems that
plagues the environmental field today-subsurface contamination. The
past three decades have ushered in various methods for removal of
organic and inorganic contaminants from the subsurface to varying
degrees of effectiveness. Because of the site-to-site variability
in the nature of contamination characteristics, the pattern of
waste disposal and accidental releases, the site characteristics
and thus contaminant behavior, and hydrologic conditions,
predicting the effectiveness of one treatment method over another
is a daunting task. Field demonstration of innovative technologies
is a key step in their development, however, only after successful
scale-up from laboratory testing. This book features chapters
written by researchers who have linked laboratory- and field-scales
in efforts to find creative, cost-effective methods for prediction
of successful remediation of contaminated soil and ground water.
State-of-the-art technologies using physicochemical removal methods
and biological methods are discussed in the context of not only
their effectiveness in remediating organic and inorganic wastes
from various subsurface environments but also in terms of useful
flask-scale methods for measuring and predicting their field-scale
effectiveness. Chapters address sorption and hydrolysis of
pesticides by organoclays, use of Fentons agents to destroy
chlorinated solvents removed from the subsurface by granulated
activated carbon, methanol flushing as a means of removing
toxaphene from soils, natural attenuation as a method for
effectiveness of remediation metals and biodegrading acid-mine
drainage constituents, and biodegradation ofradiologically
contaminated soils. Also addressed in this book are current and
future methods of assessing microbiological activity potential and
diversity and of modeling biodegradation, contaminant flux, and
gaseous transport in the subsurface.
This new volume addresses the lasting contribution made by Central
European emigre designers to twentieth-century American design and
architecture. The contributors examine how oppositional stances in
debates concerning consumption and modernism's social agendas taken
by designers such as Felix Augenfeld, Joseph Binder, Josef Frank,
Paul T. Frankl, Frederick Kiesler, Richard Neutra, and R. M.
Schindler in Europe prefigured their later adoption or rejection by
American culture. They argue that emigres and refugees from fascist
Europe such as Gyoergy Kepes, Paul Laszlo, Victor Papanek, Bernard
Rudofsky, Xanti Schawinsky, and Eva Zeisel drew on the particular
experiences of their home countries, and networks of emigre and
exiled designers in the United States, to develop a humanist,
progressive, and socially inclusive design culture which continues
to influence design practice today.
Inside a stylish North Queenslander home, comforted by the calls of
native creatures and classical tones, it appears the Baxters are an
archetypal family, complete with happy marriage and diligent son.
But 1968 is a time rife with religious controversy, political
upheaval, and the constant looming threat of conscription. The
appearance of conservative family values must be rigidly upheld -
but what happens behind closed doors? Aaron J. Clarke's play,
presented in typical eloquent style flourishing with sophisticated
language, cracks open the hard exterior of his characters to reveal
their innermost desires, secrets...And motives. How far would you
push the boundaries for the one you love?
Are you ready to change your address?
God wants to move you to an inclusive and exclusive setting
where everyone is welcome. It's not a place of new houses or jobs.
It's not a place of new clothes or shoes. It's not even a place
where "yes" is the answer to every prayer. God wants to move you to
the blessed place. As you make plans to relocate, you will discover
not only material blessings, but more importantly, the peace, love,
and joy of knowing God and settling down in Him. God has already
done His part. Now, all you need to do is start Living in the
Blessed Place.
Genre theory has been used to describe patterns within certain
types of mass media, especially patterns associated with written
and spoken language. These same methods can be applied to
interviewing and the planning and creation of focus groups.
Elicitation Strategies for Interviewing and Fieldwork: Emerging
Research and Opportunities is a pivotal reference source that
provides vital research on the application of textual strategies
associated with initiating or eliciting texts and strategies for
keeping responders on task. While highlighting topics such as
microgenre, interview protocol, and cultural context, this
publication explores interview techniques as well as the methods of
using these strategies to keep interviews relevant. This book is
ideally designed for academicians, researchers, journalists,
communication specialists, and interviewers seeking current
research on interview strategies and textual strategies important
to recognizing and evaluating patterns within responses.
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Greenwich (Hardcover)
William J Clark
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R781
R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
Save R128 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A major academic controversy has raged in recent years over the
analysis of the political and religious commitments of Samuel
Johnson, the most commanding of the 'commanding heights' of
eighteenth-century English letters. This book, one of a trilogy
from Palgrave, brings that debate to a decisive conclusion,
retrieving the 'historic Johnson.'
This 12-country comparative volume examines the impact of economic
structural adjustment programmes on grassroots civil associations
and the implications for political liberalization and
democratization in the developing countries of Latin America,
Africa, Asia and the Middle East. The authors look at the impact of
economic reform upon women's groups, human rights organizations,
social welfare non-governmental organizations, unions and business
associations. They challenge the assumption that economic reform
will automatically lead to greater democratization.
For black people in America, Christian formation historically has
come at a steep price--alienation from, even shame for, their
African past. This alienation is primarily rooted in the acceptance
of two orthodox Christian doctrines: the doctrines of original sin
and Jesus Christ as exclusive savior. This work is concerned with
the way Black Christian formation, because of the acceptance of
universal, absolute, and exclusive Christian doctrines, seems to
justify and even encourage anti-African sentiment. Clark seeks to
address this problem by constructing a doctrine of the ancestors in
an effort to legitimize indigenous African religious categories and
offer an alternative theological anthropology for the future of
Black theology.
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable,
high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
Language, Sex and Social Structure offers a cutting edge,
empirically driven approach to critical discourse analysis,
challenging the text and language-based bias that most applications
of CDA adopt. Drawing upon rich conversational data collected
during a year-long ethnographic study of a community of practice (a
university-based sports team), it introduces a method for
uncovering nuanced correlations between homophobic attitudes and
the concepts and social structures that sustain these attitudes.
Situated within seminal work in discourse theory, practice theory,
relevance theory and sociolinguistics, it presents a fresh
perspective on recent debates in the field of language and
sexuality. The book provides a thorough critique of CDA together
with a new methodology for critically analysing discourse, one
which enables more sophisticated and contextualised analyses of
ethnographic data than current models allow. Through a rigorous and
insightful application of this methodology, it exposes subtle
variations on discourses of sexuality in a community and offers new
perspectives on the emancipatory potential of CDA.
Consisting of essays of the 1960s and 1970s, and assembled by Laura
(Riding) Jackson herself, this previously unpublished collection is
both a substantial addition to the work of her later period, after
she had renounced poetry, and also a spirited contribution to later
twentieth-century debates about language, literature, and life.
There is immense variety and appeal here. Readers will find
themselves challenged by the author's combative engagement with her
contemporaries, and rewarded by the lucid complexity and immediacy
of her thinking. Topics include: love, friendship, imagination;
thinking, belief, and conviction; the importance of knowledge of
language; the active unselfishness of women; the intrinsic reality
of mind; death; good and evil; 'soul' and 'spirit'; structuralism
and theory; the novel, history, myth - besides her judgements on
writers such as Coleridge, and contemporaries such as Stein. As the
excitement aroused by 'theory' subsides, now may be the time for
Laura (Riding) Jackson's considered judgement of the spiritual
function of language and human life to be given the attention it
deserves.
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Organizational Semiotics - Evolving a Science of Information Systems IFIP TC8 / WG8.1 Working Conference on Organizational Semiotics: Evolving a Science of Information Systems July 23-25, 2001, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Hardcover, 2002 ed.)
Kecheng Liu, Rodney J. Clarke, Peter Bogh Andersen, Ronald K. Stamper, El-Sayed Abou-Zeid
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R2,831
Discovery Miles 28 310
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Organizational Semiotics: Evolving a Science of Information Systems
covers such issues as:
-Fundamental concepts such as 'information', 'data', 'message',
'communication', 'knowledge', 'organization', 'system' and so on;
-Properties of signs vital to organizational functioning, such as
their meanings, the intentions they express and the valuable social
consequences they produce;
-'Architecture' of organizations when they are viewed as
information systems, based on their semiotics features;
-Understanding language in organizational contexts, for example,
the limitations on the language used to conduct business affairs;
-The empirical study of communications for requirements
elicitation;
-Applying semiotic categories (e.g. physical, empiric, syntactic,
semantic, pragmatic, social) to various problems;
-Organizational knowledge representation;
-Business process re-engineering methods and the design of
e-commerce systems.
Spectroscopic Properties of Inorganic and Organometallic Compounds
provides a unique source of information on an important area of
chemistry. Divided into sections mainly according to the particular
spectroscopic technique used, coverage in each volume includes: NMR
(with reference to stereochemistry, dynamic systems, paramagnetic
complexes, solid state NMR and Groups 13-18); nuclear quadrupole
resonance spectroscopy; vibrational spectroscopy of main group and
transition element compounds and coordinated ligands; and electron
diffraction. Reflecting the growing volume of published work in
this field, researchers will find this Specialist Periodical Report
an invaluable source of information on current methods and
applications. Specialist Periodical Reports provide systematic and
detailed review coverage in major areas of chemical research.
Compiled by teams of leading experts in their specialist fields,
this series is designed to help the chemistry community keep
current with the latest developments in their field. Each volume in
the series is published either annually or biennially and is a
superb reference point for researchers. www.rsc.org/spr
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Jan Braai
Hardcover
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Discovery Miles 4 250
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