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This fascinating book looks at the select group of third parties
that have made a real difference in U.S. politics and governance.
Third parties have been a fixture in the American political
landscape since the beginning of the two-party system. More than
300 of these groups have surfaced, but only a handful have made a
real difference. Third-Party Matters: Politics, Presidents, and
Third Parties in American History tells the intriguing stories of
those 11 parties, starting with the antislavery Liberty Party of
1840. The parties deemed worthy of inclusion were selected because
they met at least one of three criteria. They were spoilers who
changed the outcome of an election, they had an important influence
on government policy or the future of politics, and/or they had
popular appeal, attracting at least ten percent of the vote. This
investigation reveals the background behind each party's rise, what
it stood for, who its leaders were—including larger-than-life
personalities like Teddy Roosevelt, George Wallace, and Ross
Perot—and the ultimate outcome of the election(s) in which the
party participated.
This book focuses on integrity throughout the PhD journey and
beyond, and is organised around two main themes: (1) integrity in
relation to the capabilities developed by doctoral candidates for
professional practice; and (2) integrity and coherence at the PhD
system level. The working methods of key participants such as PhD
candidates, supervisors, university managers, government agencies
and politicians are central to achieving integrity goals within PhD
programmes. In this context, a number of constructs are developed
that inform the practice-based elements of the book in relation to
conducting doctoral research, research supervision, academic
writing, and research training support systems; in particular,
these include our Moral Compass Framework for professional
integrity, notions of collective morality, decision-making when
faced with 'wicked' problems, connected moral capability and our
double-helix model of capability development, negotiated sense in
contrast with common sense, completion mindsets and contexts,
mindfulness, liminality, and mutual catalysis in joint authorship.
While the data the book employs stems from practice-led research
within the Australian doctoral system, the conclusions drawn are of
global relevance. Throughout the book, wherever appropriate,
comparisons are made between the Australian context and other
contexts, such as the doctoral systems of the United Kingdom,
Europe and the United States.
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Lake Elsinore (Hardcover)
Edythe J. Greene, Elizabeth Hepner, Mary Louise Rowden
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R674
Discovery Miles 6 740
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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This book presents modern Bayesian analysis in a format that is
accessible to researchers in the fields of ecology, wildlife
biology, and natural resource management. Bayesian analysis has
undergone a remarkable transformation since the early 1990s.
Widespread adoption of Markov chain Monte Carlo techniques has made
the Bayesian paradigm the viable alternative to classical
statistical procedures for scientific inference. The Bayesian
approach has a number of desirable qualities, three chief ones
being: i) the mathematical procedure is always the same, allowing
the analyst to concentrate on the scientific aspects of the
problem; ii) historical information is readily used, when
appropriate; and iii) hierarchical models are readily accommodated.
This monograph contains numerous worked examples and the requisite
computer programs. The latter are easily modified to meet new
situations. A primer on probability distributions is also included
because these form the basis of Bayesian inference. Researchers and
graduate students in Ecology and Natural Resource Management will
find this book a valuable reference.
Once before, as it now is again, pragmatism was a transformative,
world-wide intellectual movement that championed a new paradigm of
how we should think and act in order to meet the challenges of the
modern sciences, frame inclusive and democratic public policy, and
teach ethical habits of inclusive, meaning-filled, growth-fostering
daily living. During pragmatism's time of eclipse after World War
II, Richard J. Bernstein and a few other stubborn visionaries
struggled to keep its embers alive while successfully steering
philosophy out of its "linguistic turn." In "The Pragmatic Turn,"
Bernstein reflects on the lessons classical pragmatism can still
teach us, criticizes the ideas of some leading contemporary
thinkers, and calls younger scholars to join him in working on key
philosophical issues of the present and the future.
"Richard J. Bernstein and the Pragmatist Turn in Contemporary
Philosophy: Rekindling Pragmatism's Fire" is the response of twelve
younger critics - some fresh voices, some already well-known - and
Bernstein's response to each of them. It is a lively, accessible,
inter-generational conversation that exemplifies pragmatism's
spirit, including discussions of classical pragmatists like Peirce,
James, Dewey, Mead, and Locke, and contemporary pragmatists like
Putnam, Rorty, Brandom, and Habermas.
Britain remains mired in the most severe and prolonged economic
crisis that it has faced since the 1930s. What would it take to
find a new, more stable and more sustainable growth model for
Britain in the years ahead? This important volume written by a
number of influential commentators seeks to provide some answers.
Diversity is an unavoidable aspect of twenty-first century living.
The authors in this volume engage in cross-difference conversations
with other thinkers from earlier periods and other philosophical
traditions in order to reconstruct pragmatism and cosmopolitanism
in ways that are more attuned to our lived experience of diversity.
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Ontology and Ethics (Hardcover)
Adam C. Clark, Michael Mawson; Foreword by Clifford J. Green
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R1,188
R995
Discovery Miles 9 950
Save R193 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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While born into a working-class Methodist family in a small English
town, Catherine Booth (1829-1890) went on to become one of the most
influential women of her day and age. As a preacher, author, social
reformer, wife and mother, she played a critical role in the origin
and development of the Salvation Army, which had spread to numerous
parts of the globe by the time of her death. Possessing firm
convictions on a host of religious and moral matters, Catherine
left an indelible mark on both the Salvation Army and the wider
evangelical community. The significance of Booth's legacy is on
display in this ground-breaking volume, which brings together for
the first time her most important shorter writings on theology,
female ministry, social issues, and world missions. Including
scholarly commentary by Andrew M. Eason and Roger J. Green, this
anthology offers unparalleled insight into the life and thought of
a remarkable figure from the Victorian period. The wide-ranging
topics found within this edited collection will appeal to readers
of theology, church history, social history, Christian missions,
and women's studies.
"Political Communications" offer a unique insight into the 2005
British General Election from the perspectives of those responsible
for organizing, reporting, and understanding the campaign. It
contains definitive accounts of what happened from those most
intimately involved in preparing the main party strategies as well
as leading academic, media and polling experts.
Does the novel have a future? Questions of this kind, which are as
old as the novel itself, acquired a fresh urgency at the end of the
twentieth-century with the rise of new media and the relegation of
literature to the margins of American culture. As a result,
anxieties about readership, cultural authority, and literary value
have come to preoccupy a second generation of postmodern novelists.
Through close analysis of several major novels of the past
decade-including works by Don DeLillo, Philip Roth, Kathryn Davis,
Jonathan Franzen, and Richard Powers-Late Postmodernism examines
the forces shaping contemporary literature and the remarkable
strategies American writers have adopted to make sense of their
place in the culture.
In August 2008, long-standing tensions in the Caucasus region came
to a head when Georgia dispatched troops into the de facto
independent region of South Ossetia, with a view to re-establishing
Georgian sovereignty over the area. In response, Russia launched a
large-scale military intervention into the state of Georgia. Their
use of force went beyond the boundaries of South Ossetia, into
another breakaway region, Abkhazia, and also into Georgia Proper.
In this volume, world-renowned scholars address multiple dimensions
of that violent conflict and its aftermath, from the use of force
to human rights and from transnational litigation to the use of
international law 'rhetoric'. Drawing on a range of perspectives
from International Law, as well as International Relations, the
book probes the key issues arising from the particulars of the 2008
conflict and explores their wider implications for an international
legal order based on the rule of law. This book is indispensable
reading for all interested in the Euro-Asian region, and anyone
searching for concrete examples with regard to the way that
international law works today when inter-state conflicts erupt.
What happened to beauty? How did the university literature
classroom turn into a seminar on politics? Focusing on such writers
as Don DeLillo, Virginia Woolf, and James Merrill, this book
examines what has been lost to literature as a discipline, and to
literary criticism as a practice, as a result of efforts to reduce
the aesthetic to the ideological. Green-Lewis and Soltan celebrate
the return of beauty as a subject in its own right to literary
studies, a return all the more urgent given beauty's ability to
provide not merely consolation but a sense of order and control in
the context of a threatening political world.
In the last two decades, the role of finance in the development
process has become a major topic of research and debate. Although
it is widely agreed that there is an important link between the
two, there is much less consensus on the exact nature of the
relationship. Is financial development a prerequisite for general
economic development, or is it a more passive by-product of the
development process? In this valuable new book, a distinguished
group of authors takes stock of the existing state of knowledge in
the field of finance and the development process. Each chapter
offers a comprehensive survey and synthesis of current issues.
These include such critical subjects as savings, financial markets
and the macroeconomy, stock market development, financial
regulation, foreign investment and aid, financing livelihoods,
microfinance, rural financial markets, small and medium
enterprises, corporate finance and banking. This book will be
accessible to postgraduate and advanced undergraduate students of
finance and development. It will also be an essential reference
source for all professionals and academics working in this area who
want to learn how finance can contribute to the development process
and poverty reduction.
This book draws together a collection of essays looking at the ways
in which charters and charter scholarship in different areas of
Britain and Ireland, highlighting comparisons and contrasts in
charter production and use. The book shows the crucial importance
of charters as sources for understanding the history of royal
administration and, more broadly, the perceptions and portrayals of
kingly power, as well as developments in written culture.
As the concept of community resilience moves from the margins of
practice and theoretical research to more mainstream scholarship,
critical issues of conceptualization and use emerge. This is
particularly true at the intersection of community development
practice and community resilience theory. This book teases out
limitations with current conceptualizations of community
resilience, offers enhanced and alternative conceptualizations, and
presents compelling case studies of new conceptualizations in
action. This book is a starting place for scholarly conversations
about the role of community resilience in community development
practice. The frameworks presented here, will continue to gain more
support in academic and non-academic arenas as resilience rhetoric
increases in popularity. However, it is crucial for community
practitioners to use these frameworks to actively cultivate
resilience in their communities by building adaptive capacity in
systematic ways. To move the field of community resilience forward,
it is critical to understand the nuances of context and conditions
in communities and how broader conceptualizations of resilience
account for and utilize context to build adaptive capacity. This
book was originally published as a special issue in the journal
Community Development.
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