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This issue of Otolaryngologic Clinics, Guest Edited by Drs. M. Boyd
Gillespie and William R. Ryan, is devoted to Modern Approach to the
Salivary Glands. This issue is one of six selected each year by our
series Consulting Editor, Sujana S. Chandrasekhar. Articles in this
important issue include: Practical Salivary Ultrasound Imaging Tips
and Pearls, Indications for Facial Nerve Monitoring, IgG4-related
disorders, In-Office Sialendoscopy, Open Approaches to Stensen's
Duct Stenosis, Transoral dissection of parapharyngeal space,
Management of sialocele, Stone Management without Scopes,
Management of parotidectomy defect, Cosmetic approaches for
parotidectomy, Observation for benign parotid tumors, Management
Options for Sialadenosis, Molecular Markers that Matter in Salivary
Malignancy, Minor salivary gland carcinoma management, and Extent
and indications for elective and therapeutic neck dissection for
salivary carcinoma.
In 2008 a clip was posted on YouTube which became a worldwide
sensation. The clip, known as the Christian the Lion reunion,
showed an emotional reunion between two men and a lion. They had
purchased the lion cub at Harrods in London, kept him as a pet,
then rehomed him in Kenya on George Adamson's Kora Reserve. Key
themes of the essays in Captured: the Animal within Culture are
encapsulated in Christian's story: the implications of the physical
and cultural capture of animals. As commodities trafficked for
profit or spectacle, as subjects of scientific endeavour, the
invisibility of animal capture and the suffering it invariably
brings takes place in the context of a proliferation of
representations of animals in all aspects of human culture. Leading
scholars discuss films, novels, popular culture, performance and
histories of animal capture and several of the essays provide
compelling accounts of animal lives.
This book evaluates public service motivation (PSM) within the
milieu of a broader conceptual and theoretical landscape beyond
public management with a primary focus in management and the social
sciences. As the literature around public management has evolved,
scholars have suggested that PSM can direct applicants toward
public service-oriented careers, and once hired, many have posited
that PSM is linked to psychological outcomes and behavioral
activity within public service-oriented organizations. Although
some scholars have attempted to characterize and study PSM in
relation to concepts outside of public management, the vast
majority of scholarship has been grounded specifically in the
public management literature. This is true when characterizing PSM
as a factor that relates to career choice as well as a predictor of
motivated states once one occupies a role within an organization.
Given its continued vigor and its legitimacy, it could be argued
that in recent decades, PSM has indeed become one of the most
prominent concepts in public management. This book will be of
interest to researchers and students in the fields of public
management and public administration, as well as to policy makers
and public service managers. The chapters in this book were
originally published in Public Management Review.
Sustainable Public Management explores key issues in public sector
sustainable management that span from Nation/State to local
government. It highlights state-of-the art articulations of
public-private partnerships, public engagement,
inter-organizational networks, sustainability policy, strategy,
standard setting, and reporting. Sustainable management is an
important topic across organizational forms in the private,
not-for-profit, and public sectors because of the its practice is
tied to some of the most pressing environmental and social problems
that exist in the world. The public sector is especially important
due to its scale and scope across the globe, the tangible impacts
that public service delivery can make in resource efficiency and
effectiveness, and in directly tackling critical sustainable
development goals. This book will be of great value to scholars,
students, and policymakers interested in Public Administration and
Management, Sustainable Management and Development. The chapters in
this book were originally published as a special issue of the
Public Management Review.
Transformation is a desired outcome of Christian spirituality.
Christians pray, trust, and hope that their responsive embrace of
God will transform them. Interdisciplinary study of this process,
as journey and as significant movements, hits upon key
philosophical, theological, and psychological debates. Are all
spiritualities the same core with an overlay of traditional
practices and beliefs? How is the Holy Spirit involved in human
life as the potential for this transformation process unfolds from
birth? Can psychological theories of transformation that do not
affirm divine reality have explanatory and descriptive power for
Christian understandings of transformation? These areas of focus
and related questions encompass broad landscapes. This book places
a magnifying glass on one piece of the terrain by engaging the work
of philosopher, theologian, and psychologist James Loder, mystical
spirituality scholars Andrew Louth, Bernard McGinn, Denys Turner,
and Mark McIntosh, and archetypal movement founder James Hillman.
Without denying differences, this work is the first analysis to
identify connections among these thinkers. The significance of the
connections is both substantive and methodological for intra- and
inter-faith (broadly understood) spirituality discussion, as well
as for the engagement of the Christian church with the culture of
the twenty-first century.
Sustainable Public Management explores key issues in public sector
sustainable management that span from Nation/State to local
government. It highlights state-of-the art articulations of
public-private partnerships, public engagement,
inter-organizational networks, sustainability policy, strategy,
standard setting, and reporting. Sustainable management is an
important topic across organizational forms in the private,
not-for-profit, and public sectors because of the its practice is
tied to some of the most pressing environmental and social problems
that exist in the world. The public sector is especially important
due to its scale and scope across the globe, the tangible impacts
that public service delivery can make in resource efficiency and
effectiveness, and in directly tackling critical sustainable
development goals. This book will be of great value to scholars,
students, and policymakers interested in Public Administration and
Management, Sustainable Management and Development. The chapters in
this book were originally published as a special issue of the
Public Management Review.
In 2008 the youtube video documenting the emotional reunion between
two men and Christian the Lion became a worldwide sensation. Key
themes of the essays in Captured: the Animal within Culture are
encapsulated in Christian's story: the implications of the physical
and cultural capture of animals.
Alcohol misuse presents a major risk for health and well-being
throughout the life-span, but youth have a special vulnerability.
Alcohol is the most widely used drug by adolescents. For some, this
may be one or two isolated occasions of youthful experimentation;
for others, the use becomes excessive, placing them in danger of
immediate adverse consequences such as accidental injury and
alcohol poisoning, or encouraging other high-risk behavior patterns
including unprotected sex. Moreover, a pattern of heavy drinking
established in adolescence and young adulthood may continue into an
adult pattern of alcohol abuse.
Concerned communities and institutions across the nation are
tackling the problem of alcohol use and abuse by young people.
Research-based knowledge is urgently needed to inform these efforts
and to ensure that limited prevention resources are used as
effectively as possible. The origins of youthful alcohol use and
abuse are found within the complex interplay of individual
characteristics, family and peer influences, the larger societal
context for alcohol use, environmental conditions, and maturational
processes that accompany adolescence.
This volume, which began as a special issue of the "Journal of
Research on Adolescence," contains all of the material from the
journal issue plus additional chapters. It helps researchers to
meet the tremendous challenge of disentangling the key determinants
of risk, and developing effective interventions. Primary sources of
influence on youthful alcohol use are described, ranging from
individual expectancies about alcohol effects and cognitive
decision processes to parenting practices, peer influences, social
environments, and economic factors; and a corresponding range of
prevention interventions is discussed. This book will serve as a
primer to those with an interest in developing and improving
effective programs and activities to reduce alcohol-related
problems among young people. For those engaged in prevention
research, the text will provide useful reviews and current findings
that should aid in directing future research activities.
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