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Fertility and Pregnancy: An Epidemiologic Perspective, is a lively
overview of human reproduction: how it works, and what causes it to
go wrong. Weaving together history, biology, obstetrics,
pediatrics, demography, infectious diseases, molecular genetics,
and evolutionary biology, Allen Wilcox brings a fresh coherence to
the epidemiologic study of reproduction and pregnancy. Along the
way, he provides entertaining anecdotes, superb graphs, odd tidbits
and occasional humor that bring the topic to life.
The book is divided into two sections. The first lays the
foundations - the basic principles of reproductive physiology,
demography, infectious diseases, and genetics as they apply to
human reproduction. The second part deals with the endpoints of
reproductive epidemiology - a spectrum ranging from infertility and
fetal loss to birth defects and the delayed effects of fetal
exposures. The book closes with a discussion of unsolved problems,
suggesting possible research projects for a new generation of
epidemiologists. An extensive glossary makes this a valuable
reference as well as an enjoyable read.
Fuguitt and Wilcox skillfully guide analysts, public sector
managers, and students of decision-making through a full range of
the essential steps to perform, interpret, and assess cost-benefit
analysis. Their book shows how to grasp the principles of
cost-benefit analysis and several related economic valuation
methods, how to apply them in undertaking an objective analysis,
and how to use the analysis as a decision-making tool across a wide
range of fields and applications. An extensive knowledge of
economic theory, calculus or advanced graphical analysis is not
needed to understand the principles or techniques. Accessible to
those who understand basic algebra and have a beginner's hold on
statistics, the book also provides a bridge to the more advanced
literature in economics and to other analyses used to perform
sophisticated valuations. A unique, much-needed presentation of all
that is required to gain an immediate, useful understanding of the
topic.
The authors explain basic economic concepts and show how they
are relevant to understanding an analytical approach. They
enumerate principles and detail such technical components as with
and without analysis, discounting, decision criteria and
uncertainty assessment. The book provides especially extensive
coverage of the contingent valuation method along with market
valuation, the travel cost and property value methods, human life
valuation, and cost-effectiveness analysis. They explain empirical
methods used to perform these valuation techniques and cover survey
and regression analysis as well. Most importantly, Fuguitt and
Wilcox treat the topic within its real-world context--as a
decision-making tool to assess a particular policy's efficiency and
to provide the decision maker with necessary information.
Trade-offs between efficiency and other policy objectives are also
addressed, as is the interdisciplinary setting within which
cost-benefit analysis is interpreted, enabling readers to
understand that policy advocates and adversaries bring their own
values and competing interests to bear on any decision-making
process.
In this extraordinary work, Donald J. Wilcox seeks to discover an
approach to narrative and history consistent with the
discontinuous, relative time of the twentieth century. He shows how
our B.C./A.D. system, intimately connected to Newtonian concepts of
continuous, objective, and absolute time, has affected our
conception and experience of the past. He demonstrates absolute
time's centrality to modern historical methodologies and the
problems it has created in the selection and interpretation of
facts. Inspired by contemporary fiction and Einsteinian concepts of
relativity, he concludes his analysis with a comparison of our
system with earlier, pre-Newtonian time schemes to create a radical
new critique of historical objectivity.
The Department of Defense requested an increase of 74,200 soldiers
to the Army in January 2007 to meet strategic demands, mitigate
capability issues and relieve the pressure of constant deployments
on soldiers and families. The increase was approved and became the
Grow the Army initiative. General George Casey, Army Chief of
Staff, announced to Congress in February 2008 during The Army
Posture Statement (TAPS) that the Army will increase its end
strength more quickly than originally planned in order for the Army
to meet Regional Combatant Commander requirements. The primary
research question seeks to determine if the 2007 increase to Army
force structure will provide Regional Combatant Commanders with the
force size and capabilities required to affect their respective
operational environments. The primary research question asks, "Is
Army force structure adequate to meet operational environment
challenges faced by Regional Combatant Commanders?" In order to
answer this question, this research endeavors to understand how
Army force structure is developed, how Regional Combatant
Commanders meet national requirements, and how force structure
adequacy is measured.
The Making of the Modern Law: Legal Treatises, 1800-1926 includes
over 20,000 analytical, theoretical and practical works on American
and British Law. It includes the writings of major legal theorists,
including Sir Edward Coke, Sir William Blackstone, James Fitzjames
Stephen, Frederic William Maitland, John Marshall, Joseph Story,
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and Roscoe Pound, among others. Legal
Treatises includes casebooks, local practice manuals, form books,
works for lay readers, pamphlets, letters, speeches and other works
of the most influential writers of their time. It is of great value
to researchers of domestic and international law, government and
politics, legal history, business and economics, criminology and
much more.++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure
edition identification: ++++Harvard Law School Libraryocm19337308A
discussion on the power of Congress over slavery. Baltimore: s.n.],
1862]. 40 p.; 23 cm.
This book is to be shared by parents and children of
divorce/seperation. It deals with the time that children spend
apart from a parent and those limited times and moments that they
truly cherish together.
Presenting a new interpretation of humanist historiography, Donald
J. Wilcox traces the development of the art of historical writing
among Florentine humanists in the fifteenth century. He focuses on
the three chancellor historians of that century who wrote histories
of Florence--Leonardo Bruni, Poggio Bracciolini, and Bartolommeo
della Scala--and proposes that these men, especially Bruni, had a
new concept of historical reality and introduced a new style of
writing to history. But, he declares, their great contributions to
the development of historiography have not been recognized because
scholars have adhered to their own historical ideals in judging the
humanists rather than assessing them in the context of their own
century.
Mr. Wilcox introduces his study with a brief description of the
historians and historical writing in Renaissance Florence. He then
outlines the development of the scholarly treatment of humanist
historiography and establishes the need for a more balanced
interpretation. He suggests that both Hans Baron's conception of
civic humanism and Paul Oscar Kristeller's emphasis on the
rhetorical character of humanism were important developments in the
general intellectual history of the Renaissance and, more
specifically, that they provided a new perspective on the entire
question of humanist historiography.
The heart of the book is a close textual analysis of the works
of each of the three historians. The author approaches their texts
in terms of their own concerns and questions, examining three basic
elements of their art. The first is the nature of the reality the
historian is re- counting. Mr. Wilcox asks, "What interests the
writer? What is the substanceof his narrative? ... What does he
choose from his sources ... and what does he ignore? What does he
interpolate into the account by drawing on his own understanding of
the nature of history?" The second is the various attitudes--moral
judgments, historical conceptions, analytical views--with which the
historian approaches his narrative. And the third is the aspect of
humanist historiography to which previous scholars have paid the
least attention: the historian's narrative technique. Mr. Wilcox
identifies the difficulties involved in expressing historical ideas
in narrative form and describes the means the historians developed
for overcoming those difficulties. He emphasizes the positive value
of rhetoric in their works and points out that they "sought by
eloquence to teach men virtue."
He devotes three chapters to Bruni, whom he considers the most
original and important of the three historians. The next two
chapters deal with Poggio, and the last with Scala. Throughout the
book Mr. Wilcox exposes the internal connections among the three
histories, thus illustrating the basic coherence of the humanist
historical art.
Undergraduate-level introduction to Riemann integral, measurable sets, measurable functions, Lebesgue integral, other topics. Numerous examples and exercises.
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