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Performing Ground explores camouflage as a performance practice,
arguing that the act of blending into one's environment is central
to the ways we negotiate our identities through space. The book
offers a critically rich investigation of how the performative
practice of camouflage renders the politics of space, power, and
gender (in)visible.
The power of the modern prosecutor arises from several features of
the criminal justice landscape: widespread use of law and order
political rhetoric and heightened fear of crime among voters;
legislatures' embrace of extreme sentencing ranges to respond to
such concerns; and the uncertain or limited accountability of
prosecutors to the electorate, the bar, or other political and
professional constituencies. The convergence of these trends has
transformed prosecution into an indispensable field of study. This
volume brings together the work of leading international scholars
across criminology, sociology, political science, and law - along
with contributions from reform-minded practitioners - to examine a
variety of issues in prosecutorial behaviour and the institutional
structures that frame their behavior. The Handbook connects the
dots among existing theoretical and empirical research related to
prosecutors. Major sections of the volume cover (1) prosecutor
performance during distinct phases of a criminal case, (2) the
features of the prosecutor's environment, both inside the office
and external to the office, that influence the choices of
individual prosecutors and office leaders, and (3) prosecutorial
strategies and priorities when dealing with specialized types of
crimes, victims, and defendants. Taken together, the chapters in
this volume identify the founding texts, discuss leading
theoretical and methodological approaches, explain the scope of
unresolved issues, and preview where this field is headed. The
volume provides a bottom-up view of an important new scholarly
field.
Welfare reform was a spectacular success in New York under Mayor
Giuliani despite the city's history of liberal social programs and
its huge, entrenched welfare system. The city reduced the numbers
on welfare from 1,120,000 to 460,000 by changing the organizational
culture, protecting against fraud, insisting on 'work first,'
adapting information technology, and contracting for job placement.
The organizational culture was transformed by bold leadership that
changed the welfare agency's mission and goals, overcame internal
resistance, and prevailed over politicians who had a vested
interest in the status quo and the media that were opposed to
welfare reform. Welfare fraud was largely eliminated by dropping
from the rolls those who were working and could not appear for
in-person interviews, by fingerprinting recipients to catch those
enrolled under multiple identities and those receiving welfare
checks from other jurisdictions, by uncovering hidden income, by
enrolling new applicants only after thorough investigation, and by
tightening controls to prevent fraud by corrupt employees. JobStat,
a computer-based system modeled after the Police Department's
system used to track precinct activity, was developed to track the
status of welfare recipients and to monitor the performance of the
'Job Centers,' which were formerly called welfare offices. JobStat
focused the attention of department personnel on performance
indicators rather than on minutely specified rules. The Giuliani
administration's major contribution to national welfare reform was
the creation of the only system in the country with large-scale,
alternative work arrangements that was able to acculturate large
numbers of the never-employed to the world of work.
Operative Gynecologic Endoscopy, Second Edition is completely
revised and expanded with 17 new chapters that provide,
step-by-step, the latest operative techniques for both laparoscopic
AND hysteroscopic procedures. New and updated chapters include: -
laparoscopic assisted vaginal hysterectomy - vaginal prolapse and
bladder suspension - ectopic pregnancy - tubal reconstructive
surgery - assisted reproductive technologies - lymphadenectomy and
urologic procedures - operative hysteroscopy. In addition, this
volume includes comprehensive chapters on instrumentation, photo
documentation, anesthesia, operating room personnel, credentialing,
and legal issues. More than 350 superb illustrations - with many in
full color - complement and clarify the operative techniques. For
every surgeon and resident performing gynecologic procedures, this
is the definitive, most up-to-date text on gynecologic endoscopy.
Performing Ground explores camouflage as a performance practice,
arguing that the act of blending into one's environment is central
to the ways we negotiate our identities through space. The book
offers a critically rich investigation of how the performative
practice of camouflage renders the politics of space, power, and
gender (in)visible.
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) consists of a group of
disorders of adrenal steroidogenesis. Each disorder results from an
inherited deficiency of one of the several enzymes necessary for
normal steroid synthesis. The different enzyme deficiencies produce
characteristic patterns of hormonal abnormalities; the clinical
symptoms of the different forms of CAH depend on the particular
hormones that are deficient or that are produced in excess. The
earliest documented description of CAH was by DeCrecchio in 1865
(DeCrecchio 1865). This Neapolitan anatomist described a cadaver
having a penis with first degree hypospadias but no externally
palpable gonads. Dis- section revealed a vagina, uterus, fallopian
tubes, ovaries, and markedly enlarged adrenals. It is interesting
that the subject suffered a confusion of sex assignment, being
declared a female at birth and a male 4 years later. He conducted
himself as a male sexually and socially. Since the original
descrip- tion of this case, investigators have unravelled the
pathophysiology of the inborn errors of steroidogenesis. 1
Steroidogenesis and Enzymatic Conversions of Adrenal Steroid
Hormones A. Steroidogenesis The adrenal synthesizes three main
classes of hormones: mineralocorticoids (17-deoxy pathway),
glucocorticoids (17-hydroxy pathway), and sex steroids.
Gunnar A. V. Borg was born in Stockholm on 28. November 1927.
Educated at Stockholm University, he obtained his Ph. D. from the
University of Lund in 1962. Subsequently he held various teaching
and research appointments at the University of Umea in northern
Sweden, where he also served as President of the Graduate School of
Social Work and Public Administration in 1966-1967. In 1971 he was
appointed Professor at Stockholm University, where he headed the
Institute of Applied Psychology for over a decade. Since 1980 he
has been at Stockholm University's Department of Psychology, and in
1987 he received a Professorship in Perception and Psychophysics.
Over the last 20 years he has held several visiting appointments
abroad, particularly in the USA, and has lectured at many universi
ties both in and outside Europe. From the beginning of Gunnar's
research career, his thinking has been affected by Gestalt
psychology as well as by some principles of theoretical philosophy.
The former has not only influenced Gunnar's early unconventional
works on "gestalt strength" but also one of his major areas of
thinking, the notion of "total perceived effort," which can be seen
as a "gestalt" underlain by a variety of sensory data. The
philosophical influence is obvious: Gunnar's papers reveal an
abiding concern with epistemological issues, issues that are linked
to his persistent attempts at making interindividual comparisons.
This well-written narrative, concise but packed with history,
chronicles the struggle for African American civil rights.
Beginning in 1619 when the first ship carrying Africans arrived in
North America and continuing to the present, historian Michael L.
Levine gives readers a balanced overview of how U.S. laws have
prevented blacks from having the same civil rights as others. The
text is accompanied by 65 detailed biographical sketches that
describe the roles played by key individuals who worked to
advance--or block--the civil rights of African Americans.
The effects of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) on
globalization, innovation, growth and productivity are immense.
ICTs contribute to the globalization of production and capital
markets by reducing the cost of information and communication.
These technologies have certainly made it easier for multinationals
and other companies to spread production facilities all over the
world, to co-ordinate international marketing campaigns, and to
ease collaboration in projects taking place on different
continents. While the anti-globalization movement may claim
otherwise, individuals and consumers also have much to gain from
the internationalization of trade and commerce. Using the Internet,
consumers can today find products on sale in other countries or not
available in their own countries, and compare their standard of
living to those of others. It is also, as a result of the Internet,
much easier for consumers to become better informed. As a result of
this increased access to information, markets work more
efficiently. Furthermore, globalization has speeded up the
diffusion of innovation, bringing new knowledge, products and
services to developing countries in months rather than years or
decades. This book deals with the implications of a global economy
and the emergence of a society permeated by information and
communication technologies. The book includes a special focus on
telecommunications markets and policy and on user perspectives. The
editors have been careful to select a wide range of papers by
expert scholars and policy analysts in order to capture the book
issues from a number of perspectives. The book represents a
holistic approach, bringing to bear a number of critical
perspectives: economics, engineering, business, organization
theory, psychology, policy analysis, and security concerns. The
volume succeeds in providing a multi-faceted and rich view of the
book topic.
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Hotlanta (Paperback)
Philip L Levin; Hank Roberts
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R327
Discovery Miles 3 270
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume covers variety of aspects related to nanotechnology:
synthesis, characterization, modelling, and few practical
applications. Synthetic methods summarized in this volume are:
iodine transport (Bogdanov), laser ablation (Davydov), wet
chemistry methods (Alexandrova, Maximov). Electrochemical methods
are the technology of choice to develop oxide structures (Levine),
and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy was utilized as an
electrochemical characterization method while impedance
spectroscopy as a dielectric characterization method was applied by
Zviagin. Oxides were also extensively studied by Maximov and
Ezhovsky. Efforts in modelling by computer simulation were
performed for dendronized polymers by Mikhailov and Darinsky and
lizine dendrimers by Neelov. Star brushed structures were analyzed
by a simple direct walk model by Polotsky. Quantum phenomena is
always a focus in studies of smart nano-objects. Emphasis on this
is presented by Meleshenko. Traditionally, medical applications
have been the driving force for research in nanocomposites.
Cancer-treating effects of some transition metal Shiff bases were
reported by Yussef.
In this research compendium volume of Smart Nanocomposites, various
aspects related to nanoscale-arranged systems are discussed.
Synthesis, characterisation, modelling, and examples of practical
usage are in the list of topics brought up in this book. In the
discussion are unusual phase transition properties of some oxides,
transport properties, electrochemical characterisation methods, and
optical, electronic, and chemo-sorption properties of
nanostructured systems synthesised by various approaches.
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