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At a moment when the term "Democracy " is evoked to express
inchoate aspirations for peace and social change or particular
governmental systems that may or may not benefit more than a select
minority of the population, this book examines attempts from
ancient Mesopotemia to the democratic movements of the early
twenty-first century to sustain and improve their own lives and
those of outsiders who have migrated into territory they regard as
their own. Democratic activists have formed organizations to
regulate the distribution of water, to restore the environment, and
to assure that they and their children will have a future. They
have organized their relations with deities and those who held
secular power, and they have created particular institutions that
they hoped would help them shape a good, free, and creative life
for themselves and those who follow. They have also created laws
and representative bodies to serve their needs on a regular basis
and have written about the difficulties those they have elected to
office have maintaining their ties to those who brought them to
power in the first place. Since early times, proponents of direct
or participatory democracy have come into conflict with the leaders
of representative institutions that claim singular power over
democracy. Patriots of one form or another have tried to reclaim
the initiative to define what democracy should mean and who should
manage it. Frequently people in small communities, trade unions,
repressed, exploited, or denigrated racial, religious, political,
or sexual groups have marched forward using the language of
democracy to find space for themselves and their ideas at the
center of political life. Sometimes they have re-interpreted the
old laws, and sometimes they have formulated new laws and
institutions in order to gain greater opportunities to debate the
major issues of their time. Whatever conclusions they come to, they
are only temporary since changing times require new solutions,
assuring that democracy can only survive as a continuous process.
As such and as a system of beliefs, democracy has many flaws. But
looking cross-culturally and trans-historically, it still seems
like democracy still holds promise for improving the lives of all
the world's people.
Two worlds bound by a pomegranate gate Toba Peres can speak but she
can’t shout; she can walk but she can’t run; and she can write
in five languages… with both hands at the same time. Naftaly
Cresques dreams every night of an orange-eyed stranger; when awake,
he sees things that aren’t real; and he carries a book he can
never lose and never read. When the Queen of Sefarad orders all the
nation’s Jews to leave or convert, Toba and Naftaly are forced to
flee, but an unlucky encounter leaves them both separated from
their caravan. Lost in the wilderness, Toba follows an orange-eyed
stranger through a mysterious gate in a pomegranate grove, leaving
Naftaly behind. With a single step, Toba enters an ancient world
that mirrors her own. There, she finds that her fate—and
Naftaly’s—are bound to an ancient conflict threatening to
destroy both realms.
Cellular Agriculture: Technology, Society, Sustainability and
Science provides a state-of-the-art review of cellular agriculture
technologies. From cell selection to scaffolding and everything
in-between, this book contains chapters authored by leading
cellular agriculture researchers and product developers across the
world.Driven by consumer desire for sustainable food production,
animal welfare improvements, and better human health, companies
around the world are racing to engineer alternative protein
products with the best flavour, appearance, and texture. A major
challenge many of these early-stage companies struggle with is
having the foundational science and technical knowledge to start
their journey in this emerging industry. This text provides
detailed information on the current state of the science and
technology of cellular agriculture. It combines the social aspects
that need to be considered to create a level playing field to give
each emerging idea the best chance at realizing the ultimate vision
of cellular agriculture: satisfying the demand for protein around
the world in a way that is better for humans, animals, and the
planet.This is the first resource of its kind to take a practical
approach to review the design, feasibility, and implementation of
cellular agriculture techniques. With additional chapters on life
cycle analyses and ideal transition scenarios, this book provides a
resource for aspiring technology developers and academics alike,
seeking evidence-based assessments of the industry and its
disruptive potential.
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Letter from New York 2023 (New edition)
Helene Hanff; Introduction by Jean Hanff Korelitz; Illustrated by Bruce Eric Kaplan
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R552
R455
Discovery Miles 4 550
Save R97 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Manderley Press is delighted to announce the publication of a
brand-new edition of Helene Hanff's Letter from New York - another
literary jewel from the author of 84, Charing Cross Road. To
showcase this wonderful book, we commissioned the New York Times
bestselling author Jean Hanff Korelitz (The Plot) to pen a new
introduction - she is a cousin of Helene Hanff's, and was inspired
to become a writer after meeting her as a teenager. The front cover
was specially designed by New Yorker illustrator Bruce Eric Kaplan,
also a fan of the author and a resident of New York City too. Over
several years, Helene Hanff read aloud these stories of her life in
New York for BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour. This book is a collection
of selected scripts from this series, composed with a British
audience in mind, in which the author offers us a glimpse into her
own everyday tales of the city. Written in her trademark whimsical
and upbeat style, Helene Hanff transports us right to the heart of
Manhattan in the 1980s, describing her favourite places, people and
pets with gentle humour, and introducing the reader to the ups and
downs of life in a high-rise apartment building in New York City
("the last small town in America"). We are introduced to Bentley,
the Old English Sheepdog belonging to a neighbour who captured the
author's heart; we take a stroll through the beautiful
Shakespeare's Garden in Central Park; and we join the author to
enjoy annual city parades down Fifth Avenue - especially the St
Patrick's Day parade, when the whole of New York turned green. And
we meet Helene's friends: Arlene, whose glamorous social life - and
wardrobe - puts Hanff's tiny apartment and simple writer's life
into perspective, and Nina, whose garden on the sixteenth-floor
overflows with flowers and fruit trees. Finally, we accompany the
author as she travels to London to celebrate the opening night of
the dramatisation of her best-selling book 84, Charing Cross Road.
What started out as a six-month trial in 1978 eventually turned
into a six-year project, during which time Helene Hanff captivated
radio audiences with her monthly broadcasts - each one a love
letter to her beloved NYC. Long before the cast of Friends - and
Sarah Jessica Parker's iconic evocation of life in the city -
recreated a New York existence for us to experience vicariously,
these 5-minute vignettes were the perfect way for native New
Yorkers and international readers alike, to revel in the quotidian
as well as the glamour of city life, and to discover the unexpected
hidden gems - and treasured traditions - of New York City. Letter
from New York is still a delight to read, 40 years after it was
first written - a timeless and beguiling tale of everyday life in
this great city, by one of the best-loved authors of the
20th-century.
Utilities are required to measure TOC concentrations in treatment
plant influents and waters that contain a variety of dissolved
molecules and organic particles. Uncertainties about the analytical
accuracy of TOC measurements are the result of inadequate
proficiency evaluation standards. The three primary research goals
of the project were to: (1) develop total organic carbon (TOC)
standards that can be used with all TOC methodologies to evaluate
performance; (2) determine the ability of different TOC
methodologies to accurately measure TOC; (3) test the ruggedness of
the proficiency standards in a round-robin survey involving a large
number of laboratories. A fourth goal was to determine the
contribution of natural organic particles and suspended organic
carbon (SOC) in the formation of DBPs. In general, all laboratories
performed well in the analysis of an easily oxidized standard,
potassium hydrogen phthalate (KHP). In contrast, several analysts
had difficulty in efficiently separating an inorganic C (IC)
amendment from the KHP standard when a 30 mg IC/L spike was added
to the standard.Averaged over all instruments and analysts,
standards that were solutions were analyzed with 92 9 per cent
recovery, while standards that were particles were analyzed with 55
21 per cent recovery. The project data suggest that particles can
compete with dissolved precursor material in reactions with applied
disinfectants and contribute DBP precursors Originally published by
AwwaRF for its subscribers in 2003
Modern society is currently facing a cascade of environmental
crises. Moving forward, it will be the job of current and future
generations to develop sound and creative approaches to addressing
them. This book attempts to provide insight into the ways in which
society can confront modern agricultural, environmental, and
resource challenges. In particular, it provides an economic lens
with which to examine and confront these issues. The first part of
the book introduces a general economic framework that can be used
to analyze these issues. Subsequent chapters rely on this framework
to introduce and explain specific concepts in agricultural,
environmental, and resource economics, including (but not limited
to) non-renewable and renewable resource management, pesticide use,
and climate change. The book develops quantitative tools that the
readership can use to analyze and better understand the
complexities of these challenges. Each chapter includes specific
applications, and an accompanying Appendix includes a longer list
of practice problems that can be brought into courses as exercises.
Modern society is currently facing a cascade of environmental
crises. Moving forward, it will be the job of current and future
generations to develop sound and creative approaches to addressing
them. This book attempts to provide insight into the ways in which
society can confront modern agricultural, environmental, and
resource challenges. In particular, it provides an economic lens
with which to examine and confront these issues. The first part of
the book introduces a general economic framework that can be used
to analyze these issues. Subsequent chapters rely on this framework
to introduce and explain specific concepts in agricultural,
environmental, and resource economics, including (but not limited
to) non-renewable and renewable resource management, pesticide use,
and climate change. The book develops quantitative tools that the
readership can use to analyze and better understand the
complexities of these challenges. Each chapter includes specific
applications, and an accompanying Appendix includes a longer list
of practice problems that can be brought into courses as exercises.
Inviting Interruptions: Wonder Tales in the Twenty-First Century
anthologizes contemporary stories, comics, and visual texts that
intervene in a range of ways to challenge the popular perception of
fairy tales as narratives offering heteronormative happy endings
that support status-quo values. The materials collected in Inviting
Interruptions address the many ways intersectional issues play out
in terms of identity markers, such as race, ethnicity, class, and
disability, and the forces that affect identity, such as
non-normative sexualities, addiction, abuses of power, and forms of
internalized self-hatred caused by any number of external
pressures. But we also find celebration, whimsy, and beauty in
these same texts-qualities intended to extend readers' enjoyment of
and pleasure in the genre. Edited by Cristina Bacchilega and
Jennifer Orme, the book is organized in two sections. ""Inviting
Interruptions"" considers the invitation as an offer that must be
accepted in order to participate, whether for good or ill. This
section includes Emma Donoghue's literary retelling of ""Hansel and
Gretel,"" stills from David Kaplan's short Little Red Riding Hood
film, Bryan Kamaoli Kuwada's story about stories rooted in Hawaiian
tradition and land, and Shary Boyle, Shaun Tan, and Dan Taulapapa
McMullin's interruptions of mainstream images of beauty-webs,
commerce, and Natives. ""Interrupting Invitations"" contemplates
the interruption as a survival mechanism to end a problem that has
already been going on too long. This section includes reflections
on migration and sexuality by Diriye Osman, Sofia Samatar, and Nalo
Hopkinson; and invitations to rethink human and non-human relations
in works by Anne Kamiya, Rosario Ferr? (R), Veronica Schanoes, and
Susanna Clark. Each text in the book is accompanied by an editors'
note, which offers questions, critical resources, and other links
for expanding the appreciation and resonance of the text. As we
make our way deeper into the twenty-first century, wonder tales-and
their critical analyses-will continue to interest and enchant
general audiences, students, and scholars.
In this issue of Gastroenterology Clinics, guest editor Dr. Lee M.
Kaplan brings his considerable expertise to the topic of Management
of Obesity, Part I:Â Overview and Basic Mechanisms. Most of
the world's population live in countries where being overweight and
obese is more life-threatening than being underweight. This
preventable disease leaves patients with a cascade of health
problems, resulting in serious stress and impact on global
economies and healthcare systems. This issue, the first of two,
addresses basic mechanisms and contributors of obesity, along with
health care disparities and access.. Contains 16 practice-oriented
topics including the many forms of obesity; genetic contributions
to obesity; health complications of obesity; the effect of obesity
on gastrointestinal disease; disparities in access and quality of
obesity care; and more. Provides in-depth clinical reviews
of management of obesity, offering actionable insights for clinical
practice. Presents the latest information on this timely,
focused topic under the leadership of experienced editors in the
field. Authors synthesize and distill the latest research and
practice guidelines to create clinically significant, topic-based
reviews.Â
Cynthia Kaplan takes us on a hilarious and sometimes
heartbreaking journey through her unique, uncensored world--her
bungled romantic encounters and unsung theatrical experiences; her
gadget-obsessed father, her pill-popping therapist, and her
eccentric grandmothers; her fearless husband, whom she engages in
an ongoing battle over which of them is the most popular person in
their apartment; and, of course, her vengeful, power-hungry
one-year-old son.
Kaplan's voice is a lot like the one in our heads--the one that
most of us are only willing to listen to late at night . . . maybe
while locked in a closet. What a relief it is that someone finally
admits that she is afraid of nearly everything; that she is jealous
even of people whose lives are on the verge of collapse; and that
she has, at times, tried to pass for a gentile.
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Oedipus Redeemed (Hardcover)
Kalman J. Kaplan; Foreword by Matthew B. Schwartz
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R845
R709
Discovery Miles 7 090
Save R136 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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