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Addressing the debate around what makes a good citizen, this work
proposes a new form of post-colonial citizenship education which
can be applied in any cultural setting. International educational
partnerships provide the opportunity for participants to live out
values such as cultural empathy and thus demonstrate their right to
citizenship.
This book details all aspects of sequential clinical trials from preliminary planning, through the monitoring of the trial, to the final analysis of the results. Emphasis is placed on the triangular test and other procedures based on straight line stopping boundaries. These methods allow for frequent or occasional interim analyses and permit the analysis of a wide variety of patient responses. Alternative procedures are also covered in detail, and these include -spending function methods, repeated confidence intervals and Bayesian approaches to sequential clinical trials.
In any career in business, chances are that the time will come when
someone will ask you to do a strategy for something. Too often,
this will be a cue for stress at work and sleepless nights.
"What You Need to Know about Strategy" shows that it doesn't
have to be like this. Taking you step-by-step through the basics of
what you need to know to come up with a great strategy, it shows:
That getting the right answers depends on asking the right
questionsWhy priorities matterHow to map out your internal and
external situationHow to deal with uncertaintyHow to make tough
choicesWhat your brain does while you're doing strategy
By cutting out the theory, and focusing on the things you need
to know and do to come up with a killer strategy, this book means
that you never need to panic again.
Addressing the debate around what makes a good citizen, this work
proposes a new form of post-colonial citizenship education which
can be applied in any cultural setting. International educational
partnerships provide the opportunity for participants to live out
values such as cultural empathy and thus demonstrate their right to
citizenship.
The Other Side of the Wire brings to life a period long forgotten
in the decades that have passed since the Great War ended in 1918.
Until recently most books written on the Battle of the Somme
concentrated almost exclusively on the British effort with only a
brief mention of the period before 1 July 1916 and the German
experience in the battle. Most simply ignore the nearly two years
of warfare that preceded the momentous offensive. By focusing on
one of the principal German formations involved in the Somme
fighting, author Ralph Whitehead brings to life this little-known
period, from the initial German advance on the Somme in September
1914 through the formation of the front that became so well known
almost two years later. The book covers the early fighting around
villages that took on such notoriety in 1916: Serre,
Beaumont-Hamel, Thiepval, Ovillers, La Boisselle and Fricourt among
others. The events that took place on the Somme between September
1914 and June 1916 would slowly but surely turn the once rolling
farmland into a veritable fortress. The author brings a sense of
humanity to the story of the war using the words of the men who
fought on the Somme, many of them from previously unpublished
diaries and Feldpost letters. The book takes the reader from the
initial German invasion of the Somme through to the end of June
1916, the eve of the Somme Offensive. The reader can experience the
start of trench warfare, French attacks in 1914 and 1915 and the
implementation of trench raids and how they developed over time.
The start of mine warfare, artillery tactics, life in the rear
areas and the arrival of the British are covered in detail. A
detailed casualty list is included for seven regiments of infantry
and artillery for the period September 1914 through June 1916 in an
effort to give some scale to the losses suffered by the Germans on
the Somme during this period. One unique aspect of the book is the
hundreds of photographs of the men who actually fought in the XIV
Reserve Corps, many never published before and taken from the
author's personal collection. Overall, the book features nearly 350
photographs, many previously unpublished, giving a unique insight
into the German forces on the Somme 1914-16.
Volume 4 of The Other Side of the Wire looks at the events that
occurred in preparation for the German Offensives of 1918; the last
attempt to bring victory to the German Army. The book describes the
experiences of the men of the 26th and 28th Reserve Divisions as
the men prepared for the Spring Offensives, the attacks and the
subsequent events that took place until November 1918. The book
continues to follow the events of these divisions following the
series of offensives and the eventual collapse of the German armies
in the west, up through the final months of the war until the
Armistice and the journey home. The book looks at the collapse of
the structure of the German forces; from a powerful force until it
was no more than an empty shell of its former self. In the past it
was assumed that the German Army was not defeated in the field, and
as such the events of the last months of the war helped to spread
the concept of the army being stabbed in the back by the events
that occurred inside Germany with political unrest. This volume
will show what truly happened within the army ranks. While many
books end at the Armistice on 11 November 1918, this volume will
take the reader into the post-war years, the creation of the
veteran organizations, the rise of the Nazi Party, and the decades
that followed the end of the Second World War. One major event that
is described in detail is what happened to the Jewish veterans of
the Great War during the reign of Adolf Hitler. The book, the final
volume in the series, completes the story of the men who went off
to war in 1914 with the flush of victory, and who ultimately faced
defeat four years later. It is unique in the sense that the books
follow the XIV Reserve Corps throughout the war and into the
post-war years, giving the reader a personal glimpse into a piece
of history that is all too often ignored; the personal aspect of
this important aspect of world history.
As late as mid-1941 the two territories of Alaska and Hawaii were
little known by most Americans. Alaska was seen as a frozen
wasteland and Hawaii, an exotic outpost in the mid-Pacific with a
multi-racial, particularly Asian, population. The bombing of Pearl
Harbor in late 1941 and the capture of two Aleutian Islands in 1942
made the two territories central theatres of World War II.
Thousands of Americans came to know Alaska and Hawaii as never
before. Once the war ended both territories hoped that statehood
would be their reward for such loyal wartime service. Their
strategic locations pointed to an increased national involvement in
the Pacific and Asia. The 49th and 50th states would eventually be
admitted, but it took thirteen years, from 1946 to 1959, to do it.
The long delay was caused by many of the events of the Cold War.
Both territories became enmeshed in the national politics of
anti-communism, radical labour movements, and Arctic policy to
resist a Soviet air attack across the polar North. A cadre of
statehood supporters emerged to make their case to the nation,
including the young Daniel Inouye of Hawaii and Ted Stevens of
Alaska, both of whom would become two of the most powerful senators
in Congress.
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Paperback
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R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
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