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In 2001, George W. Bush created the White House Office of
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. The driving force behind the
policy was to create a "level playing field" where faith-based
organizations could compete on an equal footing with secular
organizations for government funding of social aid programs. Given,
on the one hand, the continuation of faith-based policy under
Barack Obama and, on the other, the continued support by the vast
majority of the American people for some form of such policy, the
need has emerged to clearly understand what this policy is and the
issues that it raises. Why? First, because the policy reveals new
paradigms that explode traditional political and religious
designations such as conservative-liberal or
evangelical-progressive. Secondly, it is a policy which is setting
precedents that with time will only become more entrenched in the
institutional fabric of American government and the values of the
culture. Finally, it does not seem to be a policy that is likely to
just go away. And if it won't go away, then, how should responsible
policy be conducted? While John Chandler's Faith-Based Policy: A
Litmus Test for Understanding Contemporary America responds to this
need to understand, it also acknowledges that there is already a
substantial amount of documentation available, which, taken
together, provides a comprehensive, though sometimes biased,
picture of faith-based policy. This book contributes a relatively
brief, impartial analysis that draws on and synthesizes the
available information. More specifically, in order to dissipate the
confusion surrounding the perceptions that many have had concerning
the intention and meaning of the policy, this book provides insight
into: 1) the theological visions of the faith-based actors behind
the policy; 2) how these actors have tried to apply these visions
as the program has evolved in the 2000s; 3) the divisiveness and
debate that has characterized the faith-based experiment, and; 4)
how all of the above may be held up for contemplation by the reader
as a mirror of developing American culture.
This insightful book draws on a range of contemporary and classic
studies to explore the connection between the personal experience
of work and the wider social structures in which it takes place.
Identity at Work examines key social identities relevant to the
workplace, such as those based on gender, sexual orientation,
ethnicity and race, disability, age, occupation, class and
organizational membership. Using research from a wide variety of
countries and academic approaches, this book provides a readable
and engaging introduction to the issues, exploring how people
experience work, understand and present themselves at work, and
relate to others. Providing an accessible investigation of work and
identity, this text will be valuable to students looking at
organizational behaviour, HRM, diversity management and the
sociology of work.
This insightful book draws on a range of contemporary and classic
studies to explore the connection between the personal experience
of work and the wider social structures in which it takes place.
Identity at Work examines key social identities relevant to the
workplace, such as those based on gender, sexual orientation,
ethnicity and race, disability, age, occupation, class and
organizational membership. Using research from a wide variety of
countries and academic approaches, this book provides a readable
and engaging introduction to the issues, exploring how people
experience work, understand and present themselves at work, and
relate to others. Providing an accessible investigation of work and
identity, this text will be valuable to students looking at
organizational behaviour, HRM, diversity management and the
sociology of work.
This textbook on practical data analytics unites fundamental
principles, algorithms, and data. Algorithms are the keystone of
data analytics and the focal point of this textbook. Clear and
intuitive explanations of the mathematical and statistical
foundations make the algorithms transparent. But practical data
analytics requires more than just the foundations. Problems and
data are enormously variable and only the most elementary of
algorithms can be used without modification. Programming fluency
and experience with real and challenging data is indispensable and
so the reader is immersed in Python and R and real data analysis.
By the end of the book, the reader will have gained the ability to
adapt algorithms to new problems and carry out innovative analyses.
This book has three parts:(a) Data Reduction: Begins with the
concepts of data reduction, data maps, and information extraction.
The second chapter introduces associative statistics, the
mathematical foundation of scalable algorithms and distributed
computing. Practical aspects of distributed computing is the
subject of the Hadoop and MapReduce chapter.(b) Extracting
Information from Data: Linear regression and data visualization are
the principal topics of Part II. The authors dedicate a chapter to
the critical domain of Healthcare Analytics for an extended example
of practical data analytics. The algorithms and analytics will be
of much interest to practitioners interested in utilizing the large
and unwieldly data sets of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.(c)
Predictive Analytics Two foundational and widely used algorithms,
k-nearest neighbors and naive Bayes, are developed in detail. A
chapter is dedicated to forecasting. The last chapter focuses on
streaming data and uses publicly accessible data streams
originating from the Twitter API and the NASDAQ stock market in the
tutorials. This book is intended for a one- or two-semester course
in data analytics for upper-division undergraduate and graduate
students in mathematics, statistics, and computer science. The
prerequisites are kept low, and students with one or two courses in
probability or statistics, an exposure to vectors and matrices, and
a programming course will have no difficulty. The core material of
every chapter is accessible to all with these prerequisites. The
chapters often expand at the close with innovations of interest to
practitioners of data science. Each chapter includes exercises of
varying levels of difficulty. The text is eminently suitable for
self-study and an exceptional resource for practitioners.
This textbook on practical data analytics unites fundamental
principles, algorithms, and data. Algorithms are the keystone of
data analytics and the focal point of this textbook. Clear and
intuitive explanations of the mathematical and statistical
foundations make the algorithms transparent. But practical data
analytics requires more than just the foundations. Problems and
data are enormously variable and only the most elementary of
algorithms can be used without modification. Programming fluency
and experience with real and challenging data is indispensable and
so the reader is immersed in Python and R and real data analysis.
By the end of the book, the reader will have gained the ability to
adapt algorithms to new problems and carry out innovative analyses.
This book has three parts:(a) Data Reduction: Begins with the
concepts of data reduction, data maps, and information extraction.
The second chapter introduces associative statistics, the
mathematical foundation of scalable algorithms and distributed
computing. Practical aspects of distributed computing is the
subject of the Hadoop and MapReduce chapter.(b) Extracting
Information from Data: Linear regression and data visualization are
the principal topics of Part II. The authors dedicate a chapter to
the critical domain of Healthcare Analytics for an extended example
of practical data analytics. The algorithms and analytics will be
of much interest to practitioners interested in utilizing the large
and unwieldly data sets of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.(c)
Predictive Analytics Two foundational and widely used algorithms,
k-nearest neighbors and naive Bayes, are developed in detail. A
chapter is dedicated to forecasting. The last chapter focuses on
streaming data and uses publicly accessible data streams
originating from the Twitter API and the NASDAQ stock market in the
tutorials. This book is intended for a one- or two-semester course
in data analytics for upper-division undergraduate and graduate
students in mathematics, statistics, and computer science. The
prerequisites are kept low, and students with one or two courses in
probability or statistics, an exposure to vectors and matrices, and
a programming course will have no difficulty. The core material of
every chapter is accessible to all with these prerequisites. The
chapters often expand at the close with innovations of interest to
practitioners of data science. Each chapter includes exercises of
varying levels of difficulty. The text is eminently suitable for
self-study and an exceptional resource for practitioners.
Presents an alternative history of the last eighteen years of West
Ham. With a commentary on each season alongside the best of the
OLAS cartoons from that campaign, this book is a warts-and-all
reflection of the view from the terraces, celebrating the
frustrations of supporting the team and the pessimistic mindset of
the long-suffering fan.
In 2001, George W. Bush created the White House Office of
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. The driving force behind the
policy was to create a "level playing field" where faith-based
organizations could compete on an equal footing with secular
organizations for government funding of social aid programs. Given,
on the one hand, the continuation of faith-based policy under
Barack Obama and, on the other, the continued support by the vast
majority of the American people for some form of such policy, the
need has emerged to clearly understand what this policy is and the
issues that it raises. Why? First, because the policy reveals new
paradigms that explode traditional political and religious
designations such as conservative-liberal or
evangelical-progressive. Secondly, it is a policy which is setting
precedents that with time will only become more entrenched in the
institutional fabric of American government and the values of the
culture. Finally, it does not seem to be a policy that is likely to
just go away. And if it won't go away, then, how should responsible
policy be conducted? While John Chandler's Faith-Based Policy: A
Litmus Test for Understanding Contemporary America responds to this
need to understand, it also acknowledges that there is already a
substantial amount of documentation available, which, taken
together, provides a comprehensive, though sometimes biased,
picture of faith-based policy. This book contributes a relatively
brief, impartial analysis that draws on and synthesizes the
available information. More specifically, in order to dissipate the
confusion surrounding the perceptions that many have had concerning
the intention and meaning of the policy, this book provides insight
into: 1) the theological visions of the faith-based actors behind
the policy; 2) how these actors have tried to apply these visions
as the program has evolved in the 2000s; 3) the divisiveness and
debate that has characterized the faith-based experiment, and; 4)
how all of the above may be held up for contemplation by the reader
as a mirror of developing American culture.
A collection of original essays by distinguished historians on the
works of topographical writers who described and recorded the
landscape of South-West England in the period c. 1540-1900. The
development, subject matter and contribution to knowledge of a
range of key authors is examined. For example, John Leland's
classic descriptions of South-West England will be assessed and the
works of local writers in the Tudor and Stuart era who followed an
developed his approach to the description of people and places is
examined. Amongst these, Richard Carew of Anthony produced perhaps
the finest of any of the descriptions of an English region in his
study of Cornwall, published in 1602. The authors follow the
writings of Devon, Cornwall, Somerset and Dorset topographers who
contributed to the genre over more than three centuries. The book
also includes a gazetter of collections in Devon and Cornwall where
copies of the works of local topographical writers can be found.
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