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The Perfect Puppy: Breed Selection and Care by Veterinary Science
for Behavior and Neutering Age provides the most updated and expert
knowledge on dog breeds to guide the selection of a puppy or mature
dog. It offers the latest information on breed-specific behavior
profiles and guidelines for spaying or neutering, health
conditions, and life expectancy. Researched and written by experts
in veterinary science and animal behavior, this book is an unbiased
and data-driven analysis of 80 of the most common dog breeds, based
on interviews with 168 practicing veterinarians. It covers
behavioral expectations per breed, while addressing traits or
issues that can arise from environmental factors like home size,
presence of other dogs, and human family dynamics. This book is
written and formatted to be used by veterinarians for optimal
guidance on canine adoptions, while also appealing to breeders and
potential adopters as well.
Why do students continue to dissect animals in biology classes?
Why, despite the excellence of teaching resources for veterinary
and human medical education that substitute for dissection, do
those provided for pre-college students fall short in convenience,
flexibility, and coordination with the curriculum? Why Dissection?
Animal Use in Education looks beyond the typical yes-or-no debate
about dissection to understand how we came to our current practice
of dissection in intermediate and high school biology, even as
preparation of health professionals has moved away from dissection.
Despite the many forces that support the continued use of
dissection in pedagogy, teachers retain much autonomy in how they
teach in the classroom, and legislation in many states provide
specific requirements for what should and should not be taught in
separated science and health curricula, offering students the
option to not engage in dissection. Why Dissection? walks students,
teachers, and parents through these options to help them make more
informed choices regarding their science education options. Why
Dissection? covers the whole gamut of issues surrounding the use of
animals in science education: BLThe early history of dissection,
and the controversies in the development of science education and
dissection. Educational testing, national and state educational
standards, and the place of dissections Legislation and regulations
related to the use of animals and dissection in teaching The animal
used in teaching The volume includes information on the many
organizations who supply relevant information and materials on
dissection and teaching resources. Databases and other specialized
websites offered heresimplify the effort required for teachers to
identify promising resources and those that will become available
in the future.
Recent years have witnessed an extraordinary growth in the richness
and diversity of Irish fiction, with the publication of highly
original and often challenging work by both new and established
writers. Contemporary Irish Fiction provides an invaluable
introduction to this exciting but largely uncharted area of
literary criticism by bringing together twelve accessible,
stimulating essays by critics from Ireland, Britain and North
America.
For well over 4 billion people - approximately 60% of all humanity
- annual income is less than $1,500. The term "Base of the Pyramid"
was first coined by Stuart L. Hart and C.K. Prahalad in 2002 and
has become synonymous with both the method by which we can more
effectively address poverty and the opportunity that exists in a
multi-trillion-dollar market. A whole new lexicon has emerged to
describe this phenomenon, including new buzzwords and catch phrases
like "inclusive business", "opportunities for the majority",
"sustainable livelihoods", "pro-poor business" and "social
business", and thousands of new businesses, institutions and
investment funds have been set up.In this ground-breaking new book,
Stuart L. Hart and Fernando Casado Caneque have worked with members
of the BoP Global Network to shake the tree, look objectively at
what has happened since 2002, highlight why earlier applications of
BoP haven't worked and propose new objectives and ways of working
to formulate more sustainable solutions. The book challenges the
reader and organizations to think about the mindset and purpose
across whole organizations, open innovation rather than simply
co-creation, and a complete review of the innovation ecosystem.
Through this book, practitioners will gain a clearer insight into
which business models can work within different communities to
ensure a sustainable transition to improved local economies.
Equally, the book is a must-read for researchers and students in
the fields of entrepreneurship, innovation, sustainable development
and environmental management.
The first critical survey of an unjustly neglected body of
literature: the autobiographies and memoirs of writers of Irish
birth or background who lived and worked in Britain between 1725
and the present day. It offers a stimulating and provocative
introduction to the themes, preoccupations and narrative strategies
of a diverse range of writers.
"Modern Irish Autobiography" provides the first comprehensive
overview of the Irish autobiographical tradition as it has received
expression in both Irish and English from the nineteenth-century to
the present day. Featuring original essays by leading Irish,
British and American critics, the book combines historically
grounded analyses of key trends and themes with theoretically
informed readings of canonical and non-canonical texts. Focusing
mainly on written autobiography, the volume locates Ireland's
autobiographers in their historical, literary and ideological
contexts and surveys the rich diversity of their achievement.
The contributors examine the distinctive themes, styles, and narrative strategies of some of Ireland's finest contemporary novelists. The scope of the collection ranges from such internationally acclaimed authors as John Banville, Edna O'Brien and Patrick McCabe, to critically neglected writers such as Clare Boylan and Dorothy Nelson. The range of topics covered is equally diverse, covering fictional representation of such concepts as the city, exile, motherhood, incest, lesbianism, and political violence in Northern Ireland.
This book analyzes implementation of Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) programs at the state level, examines costs, and suggests
ways to improve efficiency and effectiveness. It introduces an EIS
Cost Accounting System as an aid to understanding the form of the
costs of the EIS process.
Originally published in 1918, this book is a primer of the
principles of peace. The author urges that the Pact of Locarno
involves a risk graver than this country ought to sustain. He
attempts to demonstrate that the only effective method of providing
against future wars is a covenant for mutual assistance, to an
agreed extent, in maintaining peace under the League of Nations,
conditional upon the disarmament of each Power down to the limit of
the forces necessary for the fulfilment of this covenant and for
the purposes of internal order.
Look Within . Leap Beyond Close your eyes and envision yourself
standing on the threshold of an open aircraft door over two miles
above the earth. The cool turbulent air thunders inside the plane
as you peer over the edge down through the mixture of blue sky and
clouds to the patchwork of ground below. As you prepare to take the
leap you look within yourself and are confronted by the intense
anxiety of the unknown. Are you fully prepared and trained? Was
your parachute packed properly? Will you actually summon the
courage to jump from the airplane? Can we draw parallels from this
experience to business? Is your organization facing significant
challenges and obstacles? Are you and other co-workers required to
step outside your comfort zone, to drive innovation and
improvement? Does any of this sound familiar? What is holding you
back? In this book you will examine and learn from the many unique
and powerful parallels between business and skydiving. What
limiting beliefs are ingrained in you and your corporate culture?
What holds you back from taking the courageous jumps required to be
a great company? Become a JUMPER A skydiver's perspective on .
Driving Change, Improvement, and Creativity Pick Your Spot, Land on
Target: Vision, Goals, and Action Plans Broken Suspension Lines Are
a Malfunction: An Effective Culture Selecting a Parachute Packer:
The Value of Effective Hiring Cut Away a Bad Canopy: Thoughts on
Turnover and Retention Train Like a Skydiver: Effective Training
and Coaching Fly the Parachute: The Role of Leadership in
High-Performance Teams Choose Your Altitude: Effectively
Confronting Obstacles and Challenges
For well over 4 billion people - approximately 60% of all humanity
- annual income is less than $1,500. The term "Base of the Pyramid"
was first coined by Stuart L. Hart and C.K. Prahalad in 2002 and
has become synonymous with both the method by which we can more
effectively address poverty and the opportunity that exists in a
multi-trillion-dollar market. A whole new lexicon has emerged to
describe this phenomenon, including new buzzwords and catch phrases
like "inclusive business", "opportunities for the majority",
"sustainable livelihoods", "pro-poor business" and "social
business", and thousands of new businesses, institutions and
investment funds have been set up.In this ground-breaking new book,
Stuart L. Hart and Fernando Casado Caneque have worked with members
of the BoP Global Network to shake the tree, look objectively at
what has happened since 2002, highlight why earlier applications of
BoP haven't worked and propose new objectives and ways of working
to formulate more sustainable solutions. The book challenges the
reader and organizations to think about the mindset and purpose
across whole organizations, open innovation rather than simply
co-creation, and a complete review of the innovation ecosystem.
Through this book, practitioners will gain a clearer insight into
which business models can work within different communities to
ensure a sustainable transition to improved local economies.
Equally, the book is a must-read for researchers and students in
the fields of entrepreneurship, innovation, sustainable development
and environmental management.
This book considers ways in which the development of scientific and
technical information for Environmental Impact Statements can be
improved. It addresses legal, social, political, and ecological
issues and explores ways to facilitate communication between
researchers and policymakers.
This book investigates the science behind “big liarsâ€â€”those
rare people who use lies as their principal way of navigating life.
Most people are mostly honest, most of the time. And there aren't
that many big, pants-on-fire liars in the population overall. But
just a few big liars can have an outsized impact on the people
around them--ruining personal relationships, bankrupting
businesses, and even, when they attain political power, undermining
the fabric of society. Big Liars explores this small but dangerous
group through the lens of psychological science. Fascinating new
research gives us insight into the nature of dishonesty and
dishonest people, explaining who lies, what types of people lie a
lot, how often people lie, how big liars are created, how they
operate, how we can recognize them, and how we can avoid being
victimized by them. This book has crucial implications for mental
health treatment, as well as our efforts to grapple with the
effects of big liars—and their big lies—on social movements and
society as a whole.
"Hart's argument that we need to drastically revise our current
view of illegal drugs is both powerful and timely . . . when it
comes to the legacy of this country's war on drugs, we should all
share his outrage." -The New York Times Book Review From one of the
world's foremost experts on the subject, a powerful argument that
the greatest damage from drugs flows from their being illegal, and
a hopeful reckoning with the possibility of their use as part of a
responsible and happy life Dr. Carl L. Hart, Ziff Professor at
Columbia University and former chair of the Department of
Psychology, is one of the world's preeminent experts on the effects
of so-called recreational drugs on the human mind and body. Dr.
Hart is open about the fact that he uses drugs himself, in a happy
balance with the rest of his full and productive life as a
researcher and professor, husband, father, and friend. In Drug Use
for Grown-Ups, he draws on decades of research and his own personal
experience to argue definitively that the criminalization and
demonization of drug use--not drugs themselves--have been a
tremendous scourge on America, not least in reinforcing this
country's enduring structural racism. Dr. Hart did not always have
this view. He came of age in one of Miami's most troubled
neighborhoods at a time when many ills were being laid at the door
of crack cocaine. His initial work as a researcher was aimed at
proving that drug use caused bad outcomes. But one problem kept
cropping up: the evidence from his research did not support his
hypothesis. From inside the massively well-funded research arm of
the American war on drugs, he saw how the facts did not support the
ideology. The truth was dismissed and distorted in order to keep
fear and outrage stoked, the funds rolling in, and Black and brown
bodies behind bars. Drug Use for Grown-Ups will be controversial,
to be sure: the propaganda war, Dr. Hart argues, has been
tremendously effective. Imagine if the only subject of any
discussion about driving automobiles was fatal car crashes. Drug
Use for Grown-Ups offers a radically different vision: when used
responsibly, drugs can enrich and enhance our lives. We have a long
way to go, but the vital conversation this book will generate is an
extraordinarily important step.
This Brief synthesizes findings from recent experiments on jealousy
in infants with insights from pioneering thinkers in developmental
science. It discusses attachment issues, status of jealousy as an
emotion and as a feature of temperament, underpinnings in social
cognition, the development of adaptive versus maladaptive
presentations, and facets of jealousy that may be part of a normal
repertoire of coping strategies. This unique volume also identifies
facial, vocal, and bodily responses associated with jealousy as
well as situations of differential treatment by caregivers that may
bring them about. This knowledge is as useful in studying
children's emotional development as it is in addressing
jealousy-based challenges in growing families. Among the featured
topics: Jealousy in infants, defended and defined. A theory of
jealousy as temperament. Sadness, anger, fear, and love. Individual
differences and normativity. Child and contextual influences on
individual differences. Implications for clinical intervention:
preparing for a sibling's arrival. Jealousy in Infants is an
essential resource for researchers, clinicians, and graduate
students in developmental psychology, infant mental health, and
social psychology.
When the present authors entered govern in essence a modern version
of "Leach." It mental service, food chemists looked for differs
from that book in that familiarity with the everyday practices of
analytical chemistry, guidance to one book, Albert E. Leach's Food
Inspection and Analysis, of which the fourth and the equipment of a
modern food labora tory, is assumed. We have endeavored to revision
by Andrew L. Winton had appeared in 1920. Twenty-one years later
the fourth bring it up-to-date both by including newer (and last)
edition of A. G. Woodman's Food methods where these were believed
to be superior, and by assembling much new Analysis, which was a
somewhat condensed text along the same lines, was published.
analytical data on the composition of In the 27 years that have
elapsed since the authentie sam pies of the various classes of
appearance of Woodman's book, no Ameri foods. Many of the methods
described herein can text has been published covering the same were
tested in the laboratory of one of the field to the same
completeness. Of course, authors, and several originated in that
editions of Official Methods 0/ Analysis 0/ the laboratory. In many
cases methods are accompanied by notes on points calling for
Association 0/ Official Agricultural Chemists have regularly
succeeded each other every special attention when these methods are
five years, as have somewhat similar publica used."
The first critical survey of an unjustly neglected body of
literature: the autobiographies and memoirs of writers of Irish
birth or background who lived and worked in Britain between 1725
and the present day. It offers a stimulating and provocative
introduction to the themes, preoccupations and narrative strategies
of a diverse range of writers.
Modern Irish Autobiography provides the first comprehensive
critical analysis of the Irish autobiographical tradition from the
early nineteenth century to the present day. This pioneering
collection offers readers a stimulating and provocative
introduction to the principal themes, modes and narrative
strategies of Irish autobiographers.
This unique volume is one of the first of its kind to examine
infancy through an evolutionary lens, identifying infancy as a
discrete stage during which particular types of adaptations arose
as a consequence of certain environmental pressures. Infancy is a
crucial time period in psychological development, and evolutionary
psychologists are increasingly recognizing that natural selection
has operated on all stages of development, not just adulthood. The
volume addresses this crucial change in perspective by highlighting
research across diverse disciplines including developmental
psychology, evolutionary developmental psychology, anthropology,
sociology, nutrition, and primatology. Chapters are grouped into
four sections: Theoretical Underpinnings Brain and Cognitive
Development Social/Emotional Development Life and Death
Evolutionary Perspectives on Infancy sheds new light on our
understanding of the human brain and the environments responsible
for shaping the brain during early stages of development. This book
will be of interest to evolutionary psychologists and developmental
psychologists, biologists, and anthropologists, as well as scholars
more broadly interested in infancy.
This unique volume is one of the first of its kind to examine
infancy through an evolutionary lens, identifying infancy as a
discrete stage during which particular types of adaptations arose
as a consequence of certain environmental pressures. Infancy is a
crucial time period in psychological development, and evolutionary
psychologists are increasingly recognizing that natural selection
has operated on all stages of development, not just adulthood. The
volume addresses this crucial change in perspective by highlighting
research across diverse disciplines including developmental
psychology, evolutionary developmental psychology, anthropology,
sociology, nutrition, and primatology. Chapters are grouped into
four sections: Theoretical Underpinnings Brain and Cognitive
Development Social/Emotional Development Life and Death
Evolutionary Perspectives on Infancy sheds new light on our
understanding of the human brain and the environments responsible
for shaping the brain during early stages of development. This book
will be of interest to evolutionary psychologists and developmental
psychologists, biologists, and anthropologists, as well as scholars
more broadly interested in infancy.
Max and the Diaper Fairy is a delightful and uplifting potty
training story for your toddler. Max receives a visit from the
Diaper Fairy, who with her special magic fairy dust gives him the
strength and courage to use the potty. Max learns that by donating
his unused diapers to help babies all over the world, he gains new
underwear, the power to use the potty and becomes a BIG kid over
night! This is a magical and empowering potty training story that
makes potty training fun and encourages giving and helping others
less forunate. Max and the Diaper Fairy is proud to partner with
diaper banks to support diaper donation and the growth of diaper
banks across the nation.
Look Within . Leap Beyond Close your eyes and envision yourself
standing on the threshold of an open aircraft door over two miles
above the earth. The cool turbulent air thunders inside the plane
as you peer over the edge down through the mixture of blue sky and
clouds to the patchwork of ground below. As you prepare to take the
leap you look within yourself and are confronted by the intense
anxiety of the unknown. Are you fully prepared and trained? Was
your parachute packed properly? Will you actually summon the
courage to jump from the airplane? Can we draw parallels from this
experience to business? Is your organization facing significant
challenges and obstacles? Are you and other co-workers required to
step outside your comfort zone, to drive innovation and
improvement? Does any of this sound familiar? What is holding you
back? In this book you will examine and learn from the many unique
and powerful parallels between business and skydiving. What
limiting beliefs are ingrained in you and your corporate culture?
What holds you back from taking the courageous jumps required to be
a great company? Become a JUMPER A skydiver's perspective on .
Driving Change, Improvement, and Creativity Pick Your Spot, Land on
Target: Vision, Goals, and Action Plans Broken Suspension Lines Are
a Malfunction: An Effective Culture Selecting a Parachute Packer:
The Value of Effective Hiring Cut Away a Bad Canopy: Thoughts on
Turnover and Retention Train Like a Skydiver: Effective Training
and Coaching Fly the Parachute: The Role of Leadership in
High-Performance Teams Choose Your Altitude: Effectively
Confronting Obstacles and Challenges
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