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Exploring the importance of megacities and megacity-regions as one
of the defining features of the 21st century, this Handbook
provides a clear and comprehensive overview of current thinking and
debates from leading scholars in the field. Highlighting major
current challenges and dimensions of megaurbanization, chapters
form a thematic focus on governance, planning, history, and
environmental and social issues, supported by case studies from
every continent. Analysing vital questions for contemporary urban
research, this Handbook looks at: what place megacities and
megacity-regions occupy in a world of cities; how they interrogate
current thinking about urban society, theory, and policy; and what
role these largest of urban areas will play in shaping humanity's
future. Key contributions reveal that research needs to further
focus a critical and analytical lens on the particularities and
distinctive issues associated with megaurbanization. A timely and
essential read for urban studies, urban geography, and public
policy students, the interdisciplinary nature of this Handbook
provides a thorough view into the features and importance of
megacities and megacity-regions. Public policy-makers and planners
will also benefit from the wide-ranging case studies included.
Focusing on films from Chile since 2000 and bringing together
scholars from South and North America, Chilean Cinema in the
Twenty-First-Century World is the first English-language book since
the 1970s to explore this small, yet significant, Latin American
cinema. The volume questions the concept of "national cinemas" by
examining how Chilean film dialogues with trends in genre-based,
political, and art-house cinema around the world, while remaining
true to local identities. Contributors place current Chilean cinema
in a historical context and expand the debate concerning the
artistic representation of recent political and economic
transformations in contemporary Chile. Chilean Cinema in the
Twenty-First-Century World opens up points of comparison between
Chile and the ways in which other national cinemas are negotiating
their place on the world stage. The book is divided into five
parts. "Mapping Theories of Chilean Cinema in the Worl"" examines
Chilean filmmakers at international film festivals, and political
and affective shifts in the contemporary Chilean documentary. "On
the Margins of Hollywood: Chilean Genre Flicks" explores on the
emergence of Chilean horror cinema and the performance of martial
arts in Chilean films. "Other Texts and Other Lands: Intermediality
and Adaptation Beyond Chile(an Cinema)" covers the intermedial
transfer from Chilean literature to transnational film and from
music video to film. "Migrations of Gender and Genre" contrasts
films depicting transgender people in Chile and beyond.
"Politicized Intimacies, Transnational Affects: Debating
(Post)memory and History" analyzes representations of Chile's
traumatic past in contemporary documentary and approaches mourning
as a politicized act in postdictatorship cultural production.
Intended for scholars, students, and researchers of film and Latin
American studies, Chilean Cinema in the Twenty-First-Century World
evaluates an active and emergent film movement that has yet to
receive sufficient attention in global cinema studies.
Exploring the importance of megacities and megacity-regions as one
of the defining features of the 21st century, this Handbook
provides a clear and comprehensive overview of current thinking and
debates from leading scholars in the field. Highlighting major
current challenges and dimensions of megaurbanization, chapters
form a thematic focus on governance, planning, history, and
environmental and social issues, supported by case studies from
every continent. Analysing vital questions for contemporary urban
research, this Handbook looks at: what place megacities and
megacity-regions occupy in a world of cities; how they interrogate
current thinking about urban society, theory, and policy; and what
role these largest of urban areas will play in shaping humanity's
future. Key contributions reveal that research needs to further
focus a critical and analytical lens on the particularities and
distinctive issues associated with megaurbanization. A timely and
essential read for urban studies, urban geography, and public
policy students, the interdisciplinary nature of this Handbook
provides a thorough view into the features and importance of
megacities and megacity-regions. Public policy-makers and planners
will also benefit from the wide-ranging case studies included.
In a world like today, man's very survival depends on his need and
quest for Knowledge. Education is the vehicle to drive for this
knowledge; Learning is the fuel that powers that vehicle's engine,
which is Teaching. Engine and fuel components must be in good
condition for a smooth operation of the vehicle. Our educational
system has a malfunction in either or both of those components. As
proof, President Obama cited a 50% High School drop out rate, when
he recently proposed needed educational reform. Ineffective
teaching or inadequate learning or both result in poor testing
ability, which delays our journey to good education. Phil Labbe,
from his school years and afterwards, discovered that learning from
classroom only returned lower than expected test performance.
Loving to learn, he realized that self-motivation, desire to learn
on his own, plus classroom teaching, improved his learning
potential and test results. He proved it to himself and to others.
How and how much you learn make a difference. By taking an active
part in his learning, the student/learner becomes selftutored;
therefore, enters TUTOR YOURSELF. This book demonstrates that when
students make a covenant with themselves to reach a definite goal,
and condition themselves to follow strategies to enhance learning,
they succeed with good test performances, higher grades, graduation
and a good job. Unless we develop our innate skills for learning,
it is very difficult to improve our lot. In this context, Phil
Labbe developed and completed the method HOW TO PASS ALL TESTS.
Tests are very important. While there is no known panacea against
failing, the approach in this book shows that Active Learning does
lead to more successful test passing. This book could give students
a leg up in their "Race to the Top"(Reform campaign just launched
by Education Dept.). It is a race that so vitally needs to be won.
This period witnessed the first full flowering of women's writing
in Britain. This illuminating volume features leading scholars who
draw upon the last 25 years of scholarship and textual recovery to
demonstrate the literary and cultural significance of women in the
period, discussing writers such as Austen, Wollstonecraft and Mary
Shelley.
What is "Wordsworthian" Romanticism and how did it evolve? This
book argues that only by reading Charlotte Smith's poetry in tandem
with William Wordsworth's can this question be answered,
demonstrating their mutual contribution to the creation of the
"Wordsworthian," through literary analysis and historical
contextualizing of their writings.
This is a collection of state-of-the-art surveys on topics at the interface between transportation modeling and operations research given by leading international experts. Based on contributions to a NATO workshop, the surveys are up-to-date and rigorous presentations or applications of quantitative methods in the area. The subjects covered include dynamic traffic simulation techniques and dynamic routing in congested networks, operation and control of traffic management tools, optimized transportation data collection, and vehicle routing problems.
This book collects selected presentations of the Meeting of the
EURO Working Group on Transportation, which took place at the
Department of Ma- ematics at Chalmers University of Technology,
Goeteborg (or, Gothenburg), Sweden, September 9-11, 1998. [The EURO
Working Group on Transpor- tion was founded at the end of the 7th
EURO Summer Institute on Urban Traffic Management, which took place
in Cetraro, Italy, June 21-July, 1991. There were around 30
founding members of the Working Group, a number which now has grown
to around 150. Meetings since then include Paris (1993), Barcelona
(1994), and Newcastle (1996). ] About 100 participants were
present, enjoying healthy rain and a memorable conference dinner in
the Feskekorka. The total number of presentations at the conference
was about 60, coming from quite diverse areas within the field of
operations research in transportation, and covering all modes of
transport: Deterministic traffic equilibrium models (6 papers)
Stochastic traffic equilibrium models (5 papers) Combined traffic
models (3 papers) Dynamic traffic models (7 papers) Simulation
models (4 papers) Origin-destination matrix estimation (2 papers)
Urban public transport models (8 papers) Aircraft scheduling (1
paper) Ship routing (2 papers) Railway planning and scheduling (6
papers) Vehicle routing (3 papers) Traffic management (3 papers)
Signal control models (3 papers) Transportation systems analysis (5
papers) ix x TRANSPORTATION PLANNING Among these papers, 14 were
eventually selected to be included in this volume.
Romantic Visualities offers a culturally informed understanding of the literary significance of landscape in the Romantic period. Labbe argues that the Romantic period associated the prospect view with the masculine ideal, simultaneously fashioning the detailed point of view as feminised. An interdisciplinary study, it discusses the cultural construction of gender as defined through landscape viewing, and investigates property law, aesthetic tracts, conduct books, travel narratives, artistic theory, and the work of Wordsworth, Keats, Coleridge, Charlotte Smith, Ann Francis, Dorothy Wordsworth and others.
Why are there so few 'happily ever afters' in the Romantic-period
verse romance? Why do so many poets utilise the romance and its
parts to such devastating effect? Why is gender so often the first
victim? The Romantic Paradox investigates the prevalence of death
in the poetic romances of the Della Cruscans, Coleridge, Keats,
Mary Robinson, Felicia Hemans, Letitia Landon, and Byron, and
posits that understanding the romance and its violent tendencies is
vital to understanding Romanticism itself.
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Placing Charlotte Smith (Hardcover)
Elizabeth A. Dolan, Jacqueline M. Labbe; Contributions by Melissa Bailes, Stephen Behrendt, Anne Chandler, …
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R3,173
Discovery Miles 31 730
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A lively and far-ranging interest in place(s), space(s), and
situation characterizes the writing of the British Romantic-era
author Charlotte Smith (1749-1806). Smith repeatedly questions what
it means to be British in her literature. In an era of intense
nationalism, Smith explores her world in cosmopolitan terms.
Placing Charlotte Smith offers new insights into how Smith utilized
the idea of place in multiple ways, such as a theme, an idea, a
principle, or a metaphor. Several chapters in the collection
examine of Smith's own frequent change of location and the effect
on these moves had on her conceptions of home and well-being. Other
chapters analyze Smith's accounts of radicalism and patriotism in
terms of family and locate Smith's literature within comedic,
aesthetic, and scientific traditions. This volume of original
essays advances contemporary understanding of two overarching
themes in Smith studies: her place as a writer central to her
period, and her contribution to the creation of "place" as a thing
of social and literary importance.
Since the 1980s, neoliberals have openly contested the idea that
the state should protect the socio-economic well-being of its
citizens, making 'privatization' their mantra. Yet, as historians
and social scientists have shown, welfare has always been a 'mixed
economy', wherein private and public actors dynamically interacted,
collaborating or competing with each other in the provision of
welfare services. This book will be of interest to students,
scholars and practitioners of welfare by developing three
innovative approaches. Firstly, it illuminates the productive
nature of public/private entanglements. Far from amounting to a
zero-sum game, the interactions between the two sectors have
changed over time what welfare encompasses, its contents and
targets, often engendering the creation of new fields of
intervention. Secondly, this book departs from a well-established
tradition of comparison between Western nation-states by using and
mixing various scales of analysis (local, national, international
and global) and by covering case studies from Spain to Poland and
France to Greece in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Thirdly, this book goes beyond state centrism in welfare studies by
bringing back a host of public and private actors, from
municipalities to international organizations, from older charities
to modern NGOs. The Open Access version of this book, available at
www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative
Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
"Guide to Foodborne Pathogens" covers pathogens--bacteria, viruses,
and parasites--that are most commonly responsible for foodborne
illness. An essential guide for anyone in the food industry,
research, or regulation who needs to ensure or enforce food safety,
the guide delves into the nature of illnesses, the epidemiology of
pathogens, and current detection, prevention, and control methods.
The guide further includes chapters on new technologies for
microbial detection and the globalization of the food supply,
seafood toxins, and other miscellaneous agents.
Charlotte Smith's early sonnets established the genre as a Romantic
form; her novels advanced sensibility beyond its reliance on
emotional facility; and her blank verse initiated one of the most
familiar of Romantic verse forms. This volume draws together the
best of current scholarship.
Romantic Localities explores the ways in which Romantic-period
writers of varying nationalities responded to languages, landscapes
- both geographical and metaphorical - and literatures.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Ranging historically from the French Revolution to the beginnings
of Modernism, this book examines the significance of memory in an
era of furious social change. Through an examination of literature,
history and science the authors explore the theme of memory as a
tool of social progression. This book offers a fresh theoretical
understanding of the period and a wealth of empirical material of
use to the historian, literature student or social psychologist.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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Frank G. Holz, Richard F. Spaide
Hardcover
R5,149
Discovery Miles 51 490
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