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21 matches in All Departments
"This book is a classic... its style and content remain
invaluable." Entertainment Law Review This is the new edition of a
unique book about intellectual property. It is for those new to the
subject, both law students and others such as business people
needing some idea of the subject. It provides an outline of the
basic legal principles, educating the reader as to the shape of the
law. Critically, it also gives an insight into how the system
actually works. You cannot understand chess by merely learning the
rules - you also have to know how the game is played: so too with
intellectual property. The authors deliberately avoid
technicalities: keeping things simple, yet direct. There are no
footnotes to distract. Although cases are, inevitably, referred to,
they are explained in a pithy, accessible manner. All major areas
of IP - patents, trade marks, copyright and designs - are covered,
along with briefer treatment of other rights and subjects such as
breach of confidence, plant varieties and databases. A novice
reader should come away both with a clear outline of IP law and a
feeling for how it works. Students will be able to put their more
detailed study into perspective. Users will be able to understand
better how IP affects them and their businesses.
Platform Economics tackles head on the rhetoric surrounding the
so-called "sharing economy", which has muddied public debate and
has contributed to a lack of policy and regulatory intervention.
The book sheds light on the sharing economy debate by offering an
in-depth analysis both of rhetoric employed by sharing economy
actors, and by mapping key aspects of digital labour markets. The
platform is discussed both as a source of innovation and growth and
as a matter of policy concern over competition, tax collection,
consumers' protection, privacy, and algorithms transparency, and
the future of work. The authors show that actors in the sharing
economy have not only used the narratives describing the initial
phase of the sharing movement to their advantage, but have also
succeeded in enlisting diffuse interests as their allies. The
authors' research draws particular attention to the predicted
advent of technological unemployment in conjunction with widespread
concern over the robotisation of jobs. Advocating an
inter-disciplinary approach in which economics, sociology,
anthropology, legal studies, and rhetorical analysis converge, this
text will prove invaluable to students, researchers and economists
alike.
Platform Economics tackles head on the rhetoric surrounding the
so-called "sharing economy", which has muddied public debate and
has contributed to a lack of policy and regulatory intervention.
The book sheds light on the sharing economy debate by offering an
in-depth analysis both of rhetoric employed by sharing economy
actors, and by mapping key aspects of digital labour markets. The
platform is discussed both as a source of innovation and growth and
as a matter of policy concern over competition, tax collection,
consumers' protection, privacy, and algorithms transparency, and
the future of work. The authors show that actors in the sharing
economy have not only used the narratives describing the initial
phase of the sharing movement to their advantage, but have also
succeeded in enlisting diffuse interests as their allies. The
authors' research draws particular attention to the predicted
advent of technological unemployment in conjunction with widespread
concern over the robotisation of jobs. Advocating an
inter-disciplinary approach in which economics, sociology,
anthropology, legal studies, and rhetorical analysis converge, this
text will prove invaluable to students, researchers and economists
alike.
Fractal Leadership investigates leadership construction in social
movements afforded (or intensified) by algorithm-based flows of
information and viral affectivity. The book illustrates how a
somewhat amorphous structure is replicated from an intimate,
localised community level, all the way up to the global level with
swift, almost breath-taking repetitions over and over again, from
one scale to another, thus carrying new forms of leaders to sudden
public mass-following, but just as quickly sweeping them away.
Including original primary research with fieldwork from Extinction
Rebellion and Black Lives Matter in juxtaposition with archival
research of the New Left movements of the 1960s, Karatzogianni and
Matthews explore how the digital transformation of temporality
impacts on the ideologisation process, movement organisational
structure, as well as the implicated biolabour process, culminating
on the fractalisation of movement leadership and its devastating
implications for class formation, and the authoritarian turn in
global politics. Fractal Leadership serves as a point of reference
for those interested in tracing the development of leadership in
social movements from the 1960s to today.
"The most remarkable history of biology that has ever been
written."-Michel Foucault Nobel Prize-winning scientist Francois
Jacob's The Logic of Life is a landmark book in the history of
biology and science. Focusing on heredity, which Jacob considers
the fundamental feature of living things, he shows how, since the
sixteenth century, the scientific understanding of inherited traits
has moved not in a linear, progressive way, from error to truth,
but instead through a series of frameworks. He reveals how these
successive interpretive approaches-focusing on visible structures,
internal structures (especially cells), evolution, genes, and DNA
and other molecules-each have their own power but also limitations.
Fundamentally challenging how the history of biology is told, much
as Thomas Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions did for the
history of science as a whole, The Logic of Life has greatly
influenced the way scientists and historians view the past,
present, and future of biology.
"This book is a classic... its style and content remain
invaluable." Entertainment Law Review This is the new edition of a
unique book about intellectual property. It is for those new to the
subject, both law students and others such as business people
needing some idea of the subject. It provides an outline of the
basic legal principles, educating the reader as to the shape of the
law. Critically, it also gives an insight into how the system
actually works. You cannot understand chess by merely learning the
rules - you also have to know how the game is played: so too with
intellectual property. The authors deliberately avoid
technicalities: keeping things simple, yet direct. There are no
footnotes to distract. Although cases are, inevitably, referred to,
they are explained in a pithy, accessible manner. All major areas
of IP - patents, trade marks, copyright and designs - are covered,
along with briefer treatment of other rights and subjects such as
breach of confidence, plant varieties and databases. A novice
reader should come away both with a clear outline of IP law and a
feeling for how it works. Students will be able to put their more
detailed study into perspective. Users will be able to understand
better how IP affects them and their businesses.
Programming languages should be designed not by piling feature on
top of feature, but by removing the weaknesses and restrictions
that make additional features appear necessary. Scheme demonstrates
that a very small number of rules for forming expressions, with no
restrictions on how they are composed, are enough to form a
practical and efficient programming language that is flexible
enough to support most of the major programming paradigms in use
today. This book contains the three parts comprising 'R6RS', the
sixth revision of a series of reports describing the programming
language Scheme. The book is divided into parts: a description of
the language itself, a description of the standard libraries and
non-normative appendices. Early chapters introduce Scheme and later
chapters act as a reference manual. This is an important report for
programmers that work with or want to learn about the Scheme
language.
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EverMoore (Paperback)
Jacob Matthew Christianson; Isabelle Galea
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R246
Discovery Miles 2 460
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Normal Life (Paperback)
Sherice Jacob; Edited by Matthew Weingarden; Laura L. Solomon
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R361
Discovery Miles 3 610
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"We are only as sick as our secrets" explains Laura Solomon. She's
survived rape, infidelity and abuse and come out happier than she
imagined. In this wise and witty book, Solomon convinces us that
there is no such thing as a 'normal'. This book, although deep and
meaningful is filled with profanity and sexual content.
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