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Showing 1 - 25 of
26 matches in All Departments
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Jip and Jam and the Hot Sun
Elizabeth Scully; Illustrated by Laura Gomez
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R371
R326
Discovery Miles 3 260
Save R45 (12%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This edited volume brings together voices of Latinx students,
teachers, teacher educators, and education allies in Latinx
communities to reveal ways in which today's sociopolitical context
has given rise to politically-sanctioned hateful anti-immigrant
rhetoric. Contributors--key stakeholders in the education of
immigrant Latinx children, youth, and college students--share how
this rhetoric has exacerbated existing systemic injustices on
K-Higher Education. They draw attention to counternarratives that
speak to leadership and strength of community. Our contributors
include high school and college students and faculty, community
organizers, and early career academics, whose voices are too often
underrepresented in academic conversations. This book highlights
professional and personal acts of courage, community organization,
and the transformation of students and educators who are stepping
into leadership roles to effect change. Understanding that teaching
and learning are political acts, we call all those vested in Latinx
communities to engage in small and large acts of agency to
collectively impact change in our K-Higher Education systems.
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Nick and Tom (Paperback)
Cecilia Minden; Illustrated by Laura Gomez
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R304
Discovery Miles 3 040
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Nanomaterials for Food Applications highlights recent developments
in nanotechnologies, covering the different food areas where these
novel products or technologies can be applied. The book covers five
major themes, showing how nanotechnology is used in food, the use
of ingredients in nanoform to improve bioavailability or
nanoencapsulation technologies, nanotechnologies for food
processing, nanosensors for food quality and safety,
nanotechnologies for food packaging, and methods to evaluate
potential risks and regulatory issues. This is an important
research reference that will be of great value to academic and
industrial readers, as topics of importance, both at a research
level and for commercial applications, are covered. Regulatory
agencies will also be interested in the latest developments covered
in the book as they will help set the foundation for further
regulations.
In Power and Regionalism in Latin America: The Politics of
MERCOSUR, Laura Gomez-Mera examines the erratic patterns of
regional economic cooperation in the Southern Common Market
(MERCOSUR), a political-economic agreement among Argentina, Brazil,
Paraguay, Uruguay, and, recently, Venezuela that comprises the
world's fourth-largest regional trade bloc. Despite a promising
start in the early 1990s, MERCOSUR has had a tumultuous and
conflict-ridden history. Yet it has survived, expanding in
membership and institutional scope. What explains its survival,
given a seemingly contradictory mix of conflict and cooperation?
Through detailed empirical analyses of several key trade disputes
between the bloc's two main partners, Argentina and Brazil,
Gomez-Mera proposes an explanation that emphasizes the tension
between and interplay of two sets of factors: power asymmetries
within and beyond the region, and domestic-level politics. Member
states share a common interest in preserving MERCOSUR as a vehicle
for increasing the region's leverage in external negotiations.
Gomez-Mera argues that while external vulnerability and overlapping
power asymmetries have provided strong and consistent incentives
for regional cooperation in the Southern Cone, the impact of these
systemic forces on regional outcomes also has been crucially
mediated by domestic political dynamics in the bloc's two main
partners, Argentina and Brazil. Contrary to conventional wisdom,
however, the unequal distribution of power within the bloc has had
a positive effect on the sustainability of cooperation. Despite
Brazil's reluctance to adopt a more active leadership role in the
process of integration, its offensive strategic interests in the
region have contributed to the durability of institutionalized
collaboration. However, as Gomez-Mera demonstrates, the tension
between Brazil's global and regional power aspirations has also
added significantly to the bloc's ineffectiveness.
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