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Sorghum is the most important cereal crop grown in the semi-arid
tropics (SAT) of Africa, Asia, Australia and Americas for food,
feed, fodder and fuel. It is the fifth most important cereal crop
globally after rice, wheat, maize and barley, and plays a major
role in global food security. Sorghum is consumed in different
forms for various end-uses. Its grain is mostly used directly for
food purposes. After the release of the proceedings of two
international symposia in the form of books "Sorghum in Seventies"
and "Sorghum in Eighties", global sorghum research and development
have not been documented at one place. Of course, few books on
sorghum have been released that focus on specific issues/research
areas, but comprehensive review of all aspects of recent
development in different areas of sorghum science has not been
compiled in the form a single book. This book is intended to fill
in a void to bridge the gap by documenting all aspects of recent
research and development in sorghum encompassing all the progress
made, milestones achieved across globe in genetic diversity
assessment, crop improvement and production, strategies for high
yield, biotic and abiotic stress resistance, grain and stover
quality aspects, storage, nutrition, health and industrial
applications, biotechnological applications to increase production,
including regional and global policy perspectives and developmental
needs. This book will be an institutional effort to compile all the
latest information generated in research and development in sorghum
across the globe at one place.
What is behind the greening of European politics, and what is the
future of the green movement? This book examines environmental
interest groups at the vanguard of the green movement in Western
Europe-from Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth to national bird
societies and conservation groups-in order to answer these
questions. Russell J. Dalton chronicles the evolution of
environmental interest groups from their first mobilization wave in
the late 1800s to the present. Drawing on interviews with leaders
of nearly seventy major environmental groups in ten countries, he
challenges the conventional view of the environmental movement.
Dalton argues that environmental leaders are not the political
radicals portrayed by their opponents but are advocates of reform.
He also finds that green groups are active and varied participants
in the policy process. As the green movement has developed,
environmental interest groups have helped to define its goals and
identity. The environmental movement, says Dalton, has become an
advocate for a new green agenda that is reforming the policy
priorities of advanced industrial democracies. Dalton uses his
investigation into the green movement to shed light on social
movements and social theory. By comparing conservation and ecology
groups, he finds that an organization's values strongly influence
its political behavior. He concludes that social movements are
driven by their ideological views and political identity and that
these shape their choice of political goals, their potential for
action, and their pattern of behavior.
This text assembles together advances in knowledge about dementia, Alzheimers disease and related disorders as they affect persons with intellectual disabilities. Diagnosis, assessment, treatment, management and care practices are detailed in a practical manner for both students and professionals.
Related link: Free Email Alerting
East Asia is one of the most dynamic areas of political change in
the world today-what role do citizens play in these processes of
change? Drawing upon a unique set of coordinated public opinion
surveys conducted by the World Values Survey, this book provides a
dramatically new image of the political cultures of East Asia. Most
East Asian citizens have strong democratic aspirations, even in
still autocratic nations. Most East Asians support liberal market
reforms, even in nations where state socialism has been dominant.
The books findings thus provide a new perspective on the political
values of Asian publics. We demonstrate that the dramatic
socioeconomic changes of the past several decades have transformed
public opinion, altering many of the social norms traditionally
identified with Asian values, and creating public support for
further political and economic modernization of the region.
Political culture in East Asia is not an impediment to change, but
creates the potential for even greater democratization and
marketization. Comparative Politics is a series for students and
teachers of political science that deals with contemporary
government and politics. The General Editors are Max Kaase,
Professor of Political Science, Vice President and Dean, School of
Humanities and Social Science, International University Bremen,
Germany; and Kenneth Newton, Professor of Comparative Politics,
University of Southampton. The series is produced in association
with the European Consortium for Political Research.
Sorghum is the most important cereal crop grown in the semi-arid
tropics (SAT) of Africa, Asia, Australia and Americas for food,
feed, fodder and fuel. It is the fifth most important cereal crop
globally after rice, wheat, maize and barley, and plays a major
role in global food security. Sorghum is consumed in different
forms for various end-uses. Its grain is mostly used directly for
food purposes. After the release of the proceedings of two
international symposia in the form of books "Sorghum in Seventies"
and "Sorghum in Eighties", global sorghum research and development
have not been documented at one place. Of course, few books on
sorghum have been released that focus on specific issues/research
areas, but comprehensive review of all aspects of recent
development in different areas of sorghum science has not been
compiled in the form a single book. This book is intended to fill
in a void to bridge the gap by documenting all aspects of recent
research and development in sorghum encompassing all the progress
made, milestones achieved across globe in genetic diversity
assessment, crop improvement and production, strategies for high
yield, biotic and abiotic stress resistance, grain and stover
quality aspects, storage, nutrition, health and industrial
applications, biotechnological applications to increase production,
including regional and global policy perspectives and developmental
needs. This book will be an institutional effort to compile all the
latest information generated in research and development in sorghum
across the globe at one place.
The process of electoral change is accelerating in contemporary
democracies, and this book explains why. The emergence of Green
parties in the 1980s and recent far right parties, Brexit and
Trump's 2016 victory are parts of this overall process. Political
Realignment tracks the evolution of citizen and elite opinions on
economic and cultural issues from the 1970s to the 2010s-and the
impact of these changes on electoral politics and public policy.
Citizen positions on these cleavages have realigned over time,
producing a similar realignment in the structure of the party
systems to represent these demands. Economic issues remain
important, now joined by divisions on cultural issues as a backlash
to modernization. Assembling an unprecedented time series of
empirical evidence, this study explains the new forces of elector
change in both Europe and the United States.
an informative book about African animals with beautiful
photographs. It tells us what they like to eat, and where and how
they find their food
This is about our African animals, their need for water to stay
alive and where they go to find it.
This volume focuses on recent developments in our understanding of
selected adhesion processes that may offer new approaches to
developing therapeutics for a variety ofdiseases. The volume first
introduces the molecules involved in key adhesive processes, then
describes the biological consequences of several adhe- sive
interactions, and closes with a description of the initial
therapeutic ap- proaches to antagonizing. adhesion. These papers
were originally presented at the SmithKline Beecham Pharmaceuticals
Seventh U. S. Research Symposium held in Philadelphia in October of
1992. ofacell to asurface. In its simplestsense, cellularadhesion
is the adherence The cells of interest in the context of this
volume are bacterial and mammalian, with an emphasis on leukocytes;
surfaces can be other cells and tissues (such as bone), matrix
proteins, or inanimate objects such as in-dwelling medical devices
and catheters. Interaction between adhesion molecules usually
results in a spe- cific biological response. Adhesion is a form
ofcellularcommunication, and represents the way a cell senses its
environment through contact. Like hormones and cytokines, the sol-
uble mediators used by cells for communication, adhesion molecules
are defined molecular entities that recognize specific receptor
structures on the surface to which they adhere. Recent activity has
focused on defining the structure of the individual molecules
responsible for many types ofcellularadhesion. New adhe- sion
proteins are being cloned with the help of specific antibodies and
precise functional assays.
Is the party over? Parties are the central institutions of
representative democracy, but critics increasingly claim that
parties are failing to perform their democratic functions.
Political Parties and Democratic Linkage assembles unprecedented
cross-national evidence to assess how parties link the individual
citizen to the formation of governments and then to government
policies. Using the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems and
other recent cross-national data, the authors examine the workings
of this party linkage process across established and new
democracies. Political parties still dominate the electoral process
in shaping the discourse of campaigns, the selection of candidates,
and mobilizing citizens to vote. Equally striking, parties link
citizen preferences to the choice of representatives, with strong
congruence between voter and party Left/Right positions. These
preferences are then translated in the formation of coalition
governments and their policies.
The authors argue that the critics of parties have overlooked the
ability of political parties to adapt to changing conditions in
order to perform their crucial linkage functions. As the context of
politics and societies have changed, so too have political parties.
Political Parties and DemocraticLinkage argues that the process of
party government is alive and well in most contemporary
democracies.
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Animal Families (Book)
J. Dalton, P. Perry
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R87
R77
Discovery Miles 770
Save R10 (11%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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A large body of electoral studies and political party research
argues that the institutional context defines incentives that shape
citizen participation and voting choice. With the unique resources
of the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems, this book provides
the first systematic evaluation of this topic. A distinguished
international team of electoral scholars finds that the
institutional context has only a modest impact on citizen political
choices compared to individual level factors. Furthermore, the
formal institutional characteristics of electoral systems that have
been most emphasized by electoral studies researchers have less
impact than characteristics of the party system that are separate
from formal institutions. Advanced multi-level analyses demonstrate
that contextual effects are more often indirect and interactive,
and thus their effects are typically not apparent in single nation
election studies. The results have the potential to reshape our
understanding of how the institutional framework and context of
election matters, and the limits of institutional design in shaping
citizen electoral behavior.
This book re-evaluates Almond, Verba, and Pye's original ideas
about the shape of a civic culture that supports democracy.
Marshaling a massive amount of cross-national, longitudinal public
opinion data from the World Values Survey Association, the authors
demonstrate multiple manifestations of a deep shift in the mass
attitudes and behaviors that undergird democracy. The chapters in
this book show that in dozens of countries around the world,
citizens have turned away from allegiance toward a decidedly
'assertive' posture to politics: they have become more distrustful
of electoral politics, institutions, and representatives and are
more ready to confront elites with demands from below. Most
importantly, societies that have advanced the most in the
transition from an allegiant to an assertive model of citizenship
are better-performing democracies - in terms of both accountable
and effective governance.
Recent experimental progress has enabled cold atomic gases to be
studied at nano-kelvin temperatures, creating new states of matter
where quantum degeneracy occurs - Bose-Einstein condensates and
degenerate Fermi gases. Such quantum states are of macroscopic
dimensions. This book presents the phase space theory approach for
treating the physics of degenerate quantum gases, an approach
already widely used in quantum optics. However, degenerate quantum
gases involve massive bosonic and fermionic atoms, not massless
photons. The book begins with a review of Fock states for systems
of identical atoms, where large numbers of atoms occupy the various
single particle states or modes. First, separate modes are
considered, and here the quantum density operator is represented by
a phase space distribution function of phase space variables which
replace mode annihilation, creation operators, the dynamical
equation for the density operator determines a Fokker-Planck
equation for the distribution function, and measurable quantities
such as quantum correlation functions are given as phase space
integrals. Finally, the phase space variables are replaced by time
dependent stochastic variables satisfying Langevin stochastic
equations obtained from the Fokker-Planck equation, with stochastic
averages giving the measurable quantities. Second, a quantum field
approach is treated, the density operator being represented by a
distribution functional of field functions which replace field
annihilation, creation operators, the distribution functional
satisfying a functional FPE, etc. A novel feature of this book is
that the phase space variables for fermions are Grassmann
variables, not c-numbers. However, we show that Grassmann
distribution functions and functionals still provide equations for
obtaining both analytic and numerical solutions. The book includes
the necessary mathematics for Grassmann calculus and functional
calculus, and detailed derivations of key results are provided.
"The book's combined focus on parties as institutions and systems,
alongside political attitudes and behaviors, is why I use it...I
have yet to find another text that accomplishes this." -Meredith
Conroy, California State University, San Bernardino Now, more than
ever, people drive the democratic process. What people think of
their government and its leaders, how (or whether) they vote, and
what they do or say about a host of political issues greatly affect
the further strengthening or erosion of democracy and democratic
ideals. This fully updated, shorter Seventh Edition of Citizen
Politics continues to offer the only truly comparative study of
political attitudes and behavior in the United States, Great
Britain, France, and Germany. In addition to its comprehensive,
thematic examination of political values, political activity,
voting, and public images of government within a cross-national
context, the updated edition of this bestseller explores how
cultural issues, populism, Trump and far right parties are
reshaping politics in contemporary democracies. All chapters have
been updated with the latest research and empirical evidence.
Further, Dalton includes recent research on citizens' political
behavior in USA, Britain, France, and Germany, as well as new
evidence from national election studies in USA 2016, Britain 2017,
France 2017, and Germany 2017.
This book, filled with beautiful photographs, tells us how animals
communicate via signals. They send signals to show how they feel,
to warn and to mark their territory.
Comparative Politics is a series for students and teachers of
political science that deals with contemporary issues in
comparative government and politics. The General Editors are Max
Kaase, Professor of Political Science, Vice President and Dean,
School of Humanities and Social Science, International University
Bremen, Germany; and Kenneth Newton, Professor of Comparative
Politics, University of Southampton. The series is published in
association with the European Consortium for Political Research.
The popular pressures for reforms of the democratic process have
mounted across the OECD nations over the past generation. In
response, democratic institutions are changing, evolving, and
expanding in ways that may alter the structure of the democratic
process. These changes include reforms of the electoral process,
the expansion of referendums, introduction of open government
provisions, and more access points for direct political
involvement. Indeed, some observers claim that we are witnessing
the most fundamental transformation of the democratic process since
the creation of mass democracy in the early 20th Century. This
international team of distinguished scholars assembles the evidence
of how democratic institutions and processes are changing, and
considers the larger implications of these reforms for the nature
of democracy. The findings point to a new style of democratic
politics that expands the nature of democracy, but also carries
challenges for democracies to include all its citizens and govern
effectively in an environment of complex government.
This book provides the most comprehensive analysis to date of the roles that political parties perform in twenty OECD nations. It finds that parties continue to exercise their traditional roles in organizing elections and structuring the government process, but that they are losing the allegiance of a public that is increasingly non-partisan and sceptical about political parties as institutions. These findings lead to a discussion about the changing nature of representative democracy as these nations enter the 21st Century.
Is the party over? Parties are the central institutions of
representative democracy, but critics increasingly claim that
parties are failing to perform their democratic functions. This
book assembles unprecedented cross-national evidence to assess how
parties link the individual citizen to the formation of governments
and then to government policies. Using the Comparative Study of
Electoral Systems and other recent cross-national data, the authors
examine the workings of this party linkage process across
established and new democracies. Political parties still dominate
the electoral process in shaping the discourse of campaigns, the
selection of candidates, and mobilizing citizens to vote. Equally
striking, parties link citizen preferences to the choice of
representatives, with strong congruence between voter and party
Left/Right positions. These preferences are then translated in the
formation of coalition governments and their policies. The authors
argue that the critics of parties have overlooked the ability of
political parties to adapt to changing conditions in order to
perform their crucial linkage functions. As the context of politics
and societies have changed, so too have political parties.
Political Parties and Democratic Linkage argues that the process of
party government is alive and well in most contemporary
democracies.
In this study of the breakdown of traditional party loyalties and
voting patterns, prominent comparativists and country specialists
examine the changes now occurring in the political systems of
advanced industrial democracies. Originally published in 1985. The
Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology
to again make available previously out-of-print books from the
distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These
editions preserve the original texts of these important books while
presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The
goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access
to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books
published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Most democratic citizens today are distrustful of politicians,
political parties, and political institutions. Where once
democracies expected an allegiant public, citizens now question the
very pillars of representative democracy. Democratic Challenges,
Democratic Choices documents the erosion of political support in
virtually all advanced industrial democracies. Assembling an
unprecedented array of cross-national public opinion data, this
study traces the current challenges to democracy primary to
changing citizen values and rising expectations. These critical
citizens are concentrated among the young, the better educated, and
the politically sophisticated. At the same time, the evidence
debunks claims that such trends are a function of scandals, poor
performance, and other government failures. Changing public are
born from the successful social modernization of these nations. A
creedal passion for democracy is sweeping across the Western
democracies, and people now expect more of their governments. This
study concludes by examining the consequences of these changing
images of government. The author finds that these expectations are
making governing more difficult, but also fueling demands for
political reform. The choices that democracies make in response to
these challenges may lead to a further expansion of the democratic
process and a new relationship between citizens and their
government
In this study of the breakdown of traditional party loyalties and
voting patterns, prominent comparativists and country specialists
examine the changes now occurring in the political systems of
advanced industrial democracies. Originally published in 1985. The
Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology
to again make available previously out-of-print books from the
distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These
editions preserve the original texts of these important books while
presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The
goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access
to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books
published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
The popular pressures for reforms of the democratic process have
mounted across the OECD nations over the past generation. In
response, democratic institutions are changing, evolving, and
expanding in ways that may alter the structure of the democratic
process. These changes include reforms of the electoral process,
the expansion of referendums, introduction of open government
provisions, and more access points for direct political
involvement. Indeed, some observers claim that we are witnessing
the most fundamental transformation of the democratic process since
the creation of mass democracy in the early 20th Century.
This international team of distinguished scholars assembles the
evidence of how democratic institutions and processes are changing,
and considers the larger implications of these reforms for the
nature of democracy. The findings points to a new style of
democratic politics that expands the nature of democracy, but also
carries challenges for democracies to include all its citizens and
govern effectively in an environment of complex government.
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