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Showing 1 - 23 of
23 matches in All Departments
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Brawler of the Pen (Hardcover)
J D (Jet) Jones; Contributions by Katie Jones, Min Jones
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R844
R699
Discovery Miles 6 990
Save R145 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Not Far to Go Now (Hardcover)
Jet Jones; Illustrated by Katie Jones
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R606
R505
Discovery Miles 5 050
Save R101 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Hard in the Yards (Hardcover)
Jet Jones; Illustrated by Katie Jones
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R607
R506
Discovery Miles 5 060
Save R101 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Men and masculinities provides an engaging, accessible and
provocative introduction to histories of masculinity for all
readers interested in contemporary gender politics. The book offers
a critical overview of ongoing historiographical debates and the
historical making of men’s lives and identities and ideas of
masculinity between the 1890s and the present day. In setting out a
new agenda for the field, it makes an ambitious argument for the
importance of writing histories which are present-centred and
politically engaged. This means that the book engages head-on with
ferocious debates about men’s social position and the status of
masculinity in contemporary public life. In establishing a critical
genealogy for the proliferation of this crisis talk, it sets out
new ways of understanding how men’s lives and ideas of
masculinity have changed over time while patriarchy and male power
have persisted. -- .
Exam Board: Pearson BTEC Academic Level: BTEC National Subject:
Sport and Exercise Science First teaching: September 2016 First
Exams: Summer 2017 The Revision Guide is accompanied by an
ActiveBook (eBook) so that learners have the choice and flexibility
to access materials anytime or anywhere. The visually engaging
format breaks the content down into easily-digestible sections for
students and provides hassle-free instant-access revision for
learners. Clear specification fit, with revision activities and
annotated sample responses for each unit to show students how to
tackle the assessed tasks. Written with students in mind - in an
informal voice that talks directly to them. Designed to be used
alongside the Workbook with clear unit-by-unit correspondence to
make it easy to use the books together.
Exam Board: Pearson BTEC Academic Level: BTEC National Subject:
Sport and Exercise Science First teaching: September 2016 First
Exams: Summer 2017 For all four of the externally assessed units 1,
2, 3 and 13. Builds confidence with scaffolded practice questions.
Unguided questions that allow students to test their own knowledge
and skills in advance of assessment. Clear unit-by-unit
correspondence between this Workbook and the Revision Guide and
ActiveBook.
With Hip to Be Square learn how to transform five simple granny
squares into 20 bold and bright designs featuring size-inclusive
garments, stylish accessories, and beautiful homewares. All five
granny squares can be completed in a wide range of yarn weights,
colours, and types; they can be extended to create bigger blocks,
and they are interchangeable within the pattern designs, giving the
reader unlimited options and inspiration. As well as the
easy-to-follow instructions and step-by-step illustrations, Katie
also includes tips on how to care for your makes, so they stand the
test of time – the perfect antidote to fast fashion.
Chameleon Kid and The Shock were enjoying a normal day at school.
Unfortunately, it wasn't going to stay that way... Join them as
they battle stink bombs, farts and explosions. It's time for
Chameleon Kid and The Shock to save the day - AGAIN!
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Dinner Is Served (Paperback)
Emilie Dufresne; Designed by Katy Jones
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R177
R143
Discovery Miles 1 430
Save R34 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Chameleon Kid and The Shock were enjoying a normal day at school.
Unfortunately, it wasn't going to stay that way... Join them as
they battle stink bombs, farts and explosions. It's time for
Chameleon Kid and The Shock to save the day - AGAIN!
Should a citizen's right to social welfare be contingent on their
personal behaviour? Welfare conditionality, linking citizens'
eligibility for social benefits and services to prescribed
compulsory responsibilities or behaviours, has become a key
component of welfare reform in many nations. This book uses
qualitative longitudinal data, from repeat interviews with people
subject to compulsion and sanction in their everyday lives, to
analyse the effectiveness and ethicality of welfare conditionality
in promoting and sustaining behaviour change in the UK. Given the
negative outcomes that welfare conditionality routinely triggers,
this book calls for the abandonment of these sanctions and
reiterates the importance of genuinely supportive policies that
promote social security and wider equality.
'Referential expressions' are terms like determiners, proper names,
noun phrases, and definite/indefinite articles that we use to make
reference to things, beings, or events. The first of its kind, this
book presents a detailed, integrated account of typical and
atypical uses of referential expressions, combining insights from
discourse, cognitive, and psycholinguistic literature within a
functional model of language. It first establishes a foundation to
reference, including an overview of key influences in the study of
reference, the debates surrounding definiteness, and a functional
description of referring expressions. It then draws on a variety of
approaches to provide a comprehensive explanation of atypical uses,
including referring in an uncollaborative context, indefinite
expressions used for definite reference, reference by and for
children, and finally metonymic reference with a special focus on
metonymy in medical contexts. Comprehensive in scope, it is
essential reading for academic researchers in syntax, discourse
analysis, and cognitive linguistics.
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Idleness (Paperback)
Katy Jones, Ashwin Kumar
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R545
Discovery Miles 5 450
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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UK workers are stuck in a low-pay, low-productivity rut, with far
too many people working in poor quality, insecure jobs, with little
training or chance of getting on. Katy Jones and Ashwin Kumar
question the mantra that "work is the best way out of poverty" and
examine the in-work poverty that now defines employment for many.
The state's engagement with people out of work is shown to ignore
the needs of lone parents and disabled people, and has little
concern for skills and career progression. When coupled with the
degradation of social infrastructure, such as child care and
transport, the barriers to quality work can become insurmountable.
Jones and Kumar's insightful analysis reveals the need to move away
from positioning unemployment as a "behavioural problem" to be
corrected by coercive labour market policies to one that considers
the wider obstacles to better paid, quality jobs.
These dead just refuse to stay in their graves Table of Contents
The Price of My Services by Dylan Otto Krider Zero Hour by Derek
Muk Prisoners of Forever by Katie Jones I Walk, Therefore I Am by
Ryan Neil Falcone And the Weeds Shook with Laughter by John M.
Edwards The Meat Lover's Special by Miracle Austin The Zombie
Appeal by D. E. Cowen Black Friday by Willy Adkins Short-term
recollections of a life... by Sergio Palumbo Survival by Jason R.
Davis
The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) insures home mortgages
made by private lenders against the possibility of borrower
default. If the borrower does not repay the mortgage, FHA pays the
lender the remaining principal amount owed. By insuring lenders
against the possibility of borrower default, FHA is intended to
expand access to mortgage credit to households, such as those with
smaller down payments or below-average credit histories, who might
not otherwise be able to obtain a mortgage at an affordable
interest rate or at all. FHA also traditionally plays a
countercyclical role in the mortgage market. In other words, it
generally insures more mortgages during periods when lenders and
private mortgage insurers tighten their lending standards and
reduce activity in response to market conditions, and it generally
insures fewer mortgages at times when lenders and private mortgage
insurers make mortgage credit more easily available. When an
FHA-insured mortgage goes to foreclosure, the lender files a claim
with FHA for the remaining amount owed on the mortgage. Claims on
FHA-insured loans have traditionally been paid out of an account,
known as the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (MMI Fund), that is
funded through fees paid by borrowers, rather than through
appropriations. However, if FHA were ever unable to pay claims that
it owed, it can draw on permanent and indefinite budget authority
with the U.S. Treasury to pay those claims without additional
congressional action. In recent years, increased default and
foreclosure rates, as well as economic factors such as falling
house prices, have contributed to an increase in expected losses on
FHA-insured loans. This increase in expected losses has put
pressure on the MMI Fund and reduced the amount of resources that
FHA has on hand to pay for additional, unexpected future losses.
This has led to concern that FHA may need to draw on its permanent
and indefinite budget authority for funds from Treasury to hold in
reserve to pay for these higher expected future losses, or,
eventually, to pay insurance claims. An annual actuarial review of
the MMI Fund released in November 2012 showed that, according to
current estimates, FHA does not currently have enough funds on hand
to cover all of its expected future losses on the loans that it
currently insures. The results of this actuarial review heightened
concerns that FHA could need funds from Treasury. However, whether
FHA actually needs to draw funds from Treasury would be determined
as part of the annual budget process, not by the actuarial review.
FHA faces an inherent tension between protecting its financial
health and fulfilling its mission of expanding access to mortgage
credit. In addition, the share of mortgages insured by FHA has
increased in the past several years as the availability of mortgage
credit has tightened, further contributing to this tension. FHA has
recently proposed or implemented a number of changes to its
single-family mortgage insurance program that are intended to
minimize risk to the MMI Fund while still allowing FHA to support
the mortgage market and expand access to affordable mortgages.
These changes have included increasing the fees that it charges to
borrowers for insurance, modifying its underwriting criteria, and
taking steps to increase oversight of lenders who make FHA-insured
loans. While many of these changes were made administratively by
FHA, some involved congressional action. Congress has also weighed
additional changes to FHA's programs, and has considered additional
legislation aimed at protecting the financial health of the MMI
Fund. An example of such a bill is the FHA Emergency Fiscal
Solvency Act of 2012 (H.R. 4264), which passed the House of
Representatives during the 112th Congress. An identical bill (S.
3678) has been introduced in the Senate.
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