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Isaac Odeniran is a Businessman, Author and Gospel Recording
Artist. He is the founder and Director of Abundant Life Housing
Association, Abundant Life Housing and Property Services Limited,
Zoe Gospel Promotions Limited and Abundant Life Recording and
Entertainment Company Limited (Zoe Records).
This book presents the stream-tube method (STM), a method offering
computational means of dealing with the two- and three-dimensional
properties of numerous incompressible materials in static and
dynamic conditions. The authors show that the kinematics and
stresses associated with the flow and deformation in such materials
can be treated by breaking the system down into simple
computational sub-domains in which streamlines are straight and
parallel and using one or two mapping functions in steady-state and
non-steady-state conditions. The STM is considered for various
problems in non-Newtonian fluid mechanics with different
geometries. The book makes use of examples and applications to
illustrate the use of the STM. It explores the possibilities of
computation on simple mapped rectangular domains and
three-dimensional parallel-piped domains under different
conditions. Complex materials with memory are considered simply
without particle tracking problems. Readers, including researchers,
engineers and graduate students, with a foundational knowledge of
calculus, linear algebra, differential equations and fluid
mechanics will benefit most greatly from this book.
Nations, even the most powerful, cannot cope by themselves with
many of the problems confronting them. Collective efforts are
needed, and diplomacy is a key element in this process. This text
examines how diplomacy serves global governance, how the diverse
international actors use it, and what it accomplishes. The focus is
on diplomatic practice, looking at the diverse methods used by the
international actors involved and how they contribute to its
effectiveness. The first section examines how various levels of
international actors practice diplomacy. Nation states are still
key actors and they use many methods in embassies, international
conferences, international organizations, summit meetings, and
more. International organizations are both a forum for multilateral
diplomacy and a major set of international actors still growing in
significance for global governance diplomacy. In addition, a
multiplicity of regional or limited membership institutions play a
role in global governance. At the transnational level, there is the
increasing role of civil society institutions and nongovernmental
organizations in international affairs. This is where a new kind of
international actors is found, unevenly contributing to global
governance diplomacy beyond the control of public authorities. The
second section explores the functional level, looking at how
diplomacy operates in five areas of global governance: peace and
security, economic governance, social issues, human rights, and
environmental protection. Each of these presents different
challenges for global governance diplomacy and requires the
development of different diplomatic strategies and new techniques.
Some of the issues are more amenable to global governance while
others, such as the eradication of global poverty remain fairly
intractable. The text extends beyond the usual description of
diplomatic apparatus and dynamics to explore "diplomacy at work" in
specific, current policy areas that are very relevant to the
present debates in international politics.
Nations, even the most powerful, cannot cope by themselves with
many of the problems confronting them. Collective efforts are
needed, and diplomacy is a key element in this process. This text
examines how diplomacy serves global governance, how the diverse
international actors use it, and what it accomplishes. The focus is
on diplomatic practice, looking at the diverse methods used by the
international actors involved and how they contribute to its
effectiveness. The first section examines how various levels of
international actors practice diplomacy. Nation states are still
key actors and they use many methods in embassies, international
conferences, international organizations, summit meetings, and
more. International organizations are both a forum for multilateral
diplomacy and a major set of international actors still growing in
significance for global governance diplomacy. In addition, a
multiplicity of regional or limited membership institutions play a
role in global governance. At the transnational level, there is the
increasing role of civil society institutions and nongovernmental
organizations in international affairs. This is where a new kind of
international actors is found, unevenly contributing to global
governance diplomacy beyond the control of public authorities. The
second section explores the functional level, looking at how
diplomacy operates in five areas of global governance: peace and
security, economic governance, social issues, human rights, and
environmental protection. Each of these presents different
challenges for global governance diplomacy and requires the
development of different diplomatic strategies and new techniques.
Some of the issues are more amenable to global governance while
others, such as the eradication of global poverty remain fairly
intractable. The text extends beyond the usual description of
diplomatic apparatus and dynamics to explore "diplomacy at work" in
specific, current policy areas that are very relevant to the
present debates in international politics.
La periode coloniale etait caracterisee par la brutalite physique,
morale et psychologique. Personne ne doutait de ce que la chicote
nourrit le noir. C'est avec satisfaction que nos peres ont appris
que, desormais, c'est eux memes qui allaient presider aux destinees
d'une nation qui etait devenue desormais une republique. Cinquante
annees sont passees et le constat reste decevant. Au regard de la
situation quotidienne que vit le camerounais depuis lors, cette
independance fut une chimere. La colonisation est restee dans les
esprits; la brutalite, les humiliations, les spoliations, les
denigrements se sont faits plus insinueux et plus fructueux. La
seule course qui compte est la course au pouvoir
<<d'accummulation>>. On accumule le pouvoir comme on
accummule l'argent; le pouvoir, la raison et l'argent etant restes
sans partage dans les mains du plus fort. Ceci a cree un phenomene
social de corruption que seuls les discours, les actions
sporadiques et spectaculaires ne sauraient reduire, voire
eradiquer. Aujourd'hui, la societe camerounaise n'est pas un cadre
d'epanouissement oA' l'on trouve dans le gouvernement un partenaire
fiable. La corruption est la seule possibilite d'adaptation aurtour
de laquelle se joue le jeu d'existence et de survie. Vivre c'est
corrompre. Aux orties et a la mort celui qui ne veut ou ne peut
corrompre. Depuis les independances, le camerounais vit dans la
logique du <<on ne sais jamais>> . Il dois lecher les
bottes du prince, parce qu'on ne sait jamais; Meme les
intellectuels ont demissionne de leur devoir de douter pour
s'aligner a la queue leue leue derriere le prince; Des lors, le
meilleur verbe sert a lui formuler des motions de soutien. Il doit
etre citer dans tous les actes de la vie quotidienne par ce que son
coup de colere peut envoyer n'importe qui aller gouter la paille
humide et chaude des cachots insalubres et infestes. D'ailleurs,
ses sbires se retrouvent partout et sont prets a denoncer
l'heretique. Apres cinquante ans d'independance, arborer un titre
d'intellectuel au Cameroun ne vaut pas plus que celui d'un garde
champetre. Ceux de qui on etait en droit d'attendre la
conceptualisation du develloppement du pays sont devenus tous des
compteurs de monnaie de singe au seuil du palais du prince.
Personne n'osant lui demander de declarer ses biens pour une
transparence totale. L'orginalite du present travail, repose sur le
genie que Jean Robert Mbane a pu deployer pour mettre ensemble les
frustrations exprimees, les luttes quotidiennes, les aspirations
profondes de ceux des camerounais qui revent encore d'un avenir
liberee du sceptre de la corruption, de l'angoisse mortelle, de
l'ignorance, de la peur, de la pauvrete au Cameroun. En consacrant
ses publications aux questions de democratie et de gouvernance,
Jean Robert voudrait prouver a ses compatriotes que la situation
n'est pas desesperee et qu'en y mettant un peu de volonte
d'honnetete, on peut remedier a la situation. Il s'agit aussi d'une
question de liberte et d'independance.
This book presents the stream-tube method (STM), a method offering
computational means of dealing with the two- and three-dimensional
properties of numerous incompressible materials in static and
dynamic conditions. The authors show that the kinematics and
stresses associated with the flow and deformation in such materials
can be treated by breaking the system down into simple
computational sub-domains in which streamlines are straight and
parallel and using one or two mapping functions in steady-state and
non-steady-state conditions. The STM is considered for various
problems in non-Newtonian fluid mechanics with different
geometries. The book makes use of examples and applications to
illustrate the use of the STM. It explores the possibilities of
computation on simple mapped rectangular domains and
three-dimensional parallel-piped domains under different
conditions. Complex materials with memory are considered simply
without particle tracking problems. Readers, including researchers,
engineers and graduate students, with a foundational knowledge of
calculus, linear algebra, differential equations and fluid
mechanics will benefit most greatly from this book.
Aristotle's Politics is widely acknowledged as a classic and one of
the founding texts of political theory and philosophy. Written by a
leading expert in ancient philosophical thought, Aristotle and the
Politics is a coherent guide that makes sense of an often difficult
and disorganized work, carefully explaining its key themes. Jean
Roberts introduces and assesses: Aristotle's life and the
background to Politics the ideas and text of Politics the
continuing importance of Aristotle's work to philosophy today.
Aristotle is one of the most important figures in Western thought
and Politics contains some of our earliest ideas about democracy.
This is essential reading for all students of philosophy and
political thought.
Innovation is promoted to improve performance and increase the
quality of services provided by public service organisations.
Managing public services innovation provides the first in-depth
exploration of innovation and the management of innovation in the
housing association sector. Drawing on longitudinal case studies
and data sets, including the Housing Corporation's Innovation and
Good Practice database, Managing public services innovation:
indicates that housing associations have innovative capacity and
classifies innovation in the sector; identifies the 'innovative
housing association' and its key characteristics; explores the way
innovation has been managed in housing associations making
recommendations for best practice; develops techniques to develop
evidence-based policy in the housing association sector; discusses
the implications of innovating in regulated public service
industries. Managing public services innovation is essential
reading for housing industry and public management professionals,
policy makers and academics in housing, business and public
management departments.
In principle, money illusion could explain the inertial adjustment
of prices after changes of monetary policy. Hence, money illusion
could provide an explanation of monetary non-neutrality. However,
this explanation has been thoroughly discredited in modern
economics. As a consequence, economists have ever since the 1970s
searched for alternative explanations for nominal rigidity. These
explanations are all based on the assumption of fully rational
economic agents, holding rational expectations. This book argues
that money illusion has been prematurely dismissed as an
explanation of monetary non-neutrality. Methods of experimental
economics are used to investigate the real aggregate effects of
money illusion. It is shown that money illusion in fact causes
(short-run) real income effects if strategic complementarity
prevails. Strategic complementarity is an important characteristic
of naturally occurring macroeconomies and is a recurrent theme in
most models explaining nominal rigidity.
There are 27 million slaves living in the world today-more than at
any time in history. Three hundred thousand of them are
impoverished children in Haiti, who "stay with" families as unpaid
and uneducated domestic workers, subject to physical, emotional,
and sexual abuse. This practice, known locally as restavek
("staying with"), is so widespread that one in ten Haitian children
is caught up in this form of slavery. Jean-Robert Cadet was a
restavek in Haiti from the late 1950s until the early 1970s. He
told the harrowing story of his youth in Restavec: From Haitian
Slave Child to Middle-Class American-a landmark book that exposed
ongoing child slavery in Haiti. Now in My Stone of Hope, Cadet
continues his story from his early attempts to adjust to freedom in
American society to his current life mission of eliminating child
slavery through advocacy and education. As he recounts his own
struggles to surmount the psychological wounds of slavery, Cadet
puts a human face on the suffering that hundreds of thousands of
Haitians still endure daily. He also builds a convincing case that
child slavery is not just one among many problems that Haiti faces
as the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation. Rather, he argues that
the systematic abuse of so many of its children is Haiti's
fundamental problem, because it creates damaged adults who seem
incapable of governing the country justly or managing its economy
productively. For everyone concerned about the fate of Haiti, the
welfare of children, and the freedom of people around the globe, My
Stone of Hope sounds an irresistible call to action.
The paper presents the results of an experiment in which a number
of high school students with Danish and Muslim names were recruited
to put letters in envelopes, paid on a piecework basis. They were
to work in pairs, and could choose to work with a person of the
same or a different ethnic origin as their own. They could earn
more if they worked together with a person of a different ethnic
background. How many would elect to discriminate according to
ethnicity in such a situation?
This we can be sure of: when a restaurant in the western world
is famous for its cooking, it is the tricolor flag that hangs above
the stove, opined one French magazine, and this is by no means an
isolated example of such crowing. Indeed, both linguistically and
conceptually, the restaurant itself is a French creation. Why are
the French recognized by themselves and others the world over as
the most enlightened of eaters, as the great gourmets? Why did the
passion for food -- gastronomy -- originate in France? In "French
Gastronomy," geographer and food lover Jean-Robert Pitte uncovers a
novel answer. The key, it turns out, is France herself. In her
climate, diversity of soils, abundant resources, and varied
topography lie the roots of France's food fame.
Pitte masterfully reveals the ways in which cultural phenomena
surrounding food and eating in France relate to space and place. He
points out that France has some six hundred regions, or
microclimates, that allow different agricultures, to flourish, and
fully navigable river systems leading from peripheral farmlands
directly to markets in the great gastronomic centers of Paris and
Lyon. With an eye to this landscape, Pitte wonders: Would the great
French burgundies enjoy such prestige if the coast they came from
were not situated close to the ancient capital for the dukes and a
major travel route for medieval Europe?
Yet for all the shaping influence of earth and climate, Pitte
demonstrates that haute cuisine, like so much that is great about
France, can be traced back to the court of Louis XIV. It was the
Sun King's regal gourmandise -- he enacted a nightly theater of
eating, dining alone but in full view of the court -- that made
food and fine dining a central affair of state. The Catholic Church
figures prominently as well: gluttony was regarded as a "benign
sin" in France, and eating well was associated with praising God,
fraternal conviviality, and a respect for the body. These cultural
ingredients, in combination with the bounties of the land,
contributed to the full flowering of French foodways.
This is a time of paradox for French gourmandism. Never has
there been so much literature published on the subject of culinary
creativity, never has there been so much talk about good food, and
never has so little cooking been done at home. Each day new
fast-food places open. Will French cuisine lose its charm and its
soul? Will discourse become a substitute for reality? French
Gastronomy is a delightful celebration of what makes France unique,
and a call to everyone who loves French food to rediscover its full
flavor.
African slaves in Haiti emancipated themselves from French rule
in 1804 and created the first independent black republic in the
Western Hemisphere. But they reinstituted slavery for the most
vulnerable members of Haitian society--the children of the poor--by
using them as unpaid servants to the wealthy. These children
were--and still are--"restavecs," a French term whose literal
meaning of "staying with" disguises the unremitting labor, abuse,
and denial of education that characterizes the children's
lives.
In this memoir, Jean-Robert Cadet recounts the harrowing story
of his youth as a restavec, as well as his inspiring climb to
middle-class American life. He vividly describes what it was like
to be an unwanted illegitimate child "staying with" a well-to-do
family whose physical and emotional abuse was sanctioned by Haitian
society. He also details his subsequent life in the United States,
where, despite American racism, he put himself through college and
found success in the Army, in business, and finally in
teaching.
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