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Focusing on a number of contemporary research themes and placing
them within the context of palpable changes that have occurred
within football in recent years, this timely collection brings
together essays about football, crime and fan behaviour from
leading experts in the fields of criminology, law, sociology,
psychology and cultural studies.
This book is the first study of the role of British Ambassadors in
shaping Anglo-American relations during the first generation of the
'special relationship'. As well as showing how ambassadors wielded
influence in Washington and helped to formulate British foreign
policy, it offers insights into the role of the embassy in modern
diplomacy.
This book enables the reader to understand labor markets and shows how to forecast the need for skills in developing countries. The forecasting of these skills has recently fallen into disrepute with the notion that all forecasting techniques that assessed the labor market requirements of the future were dubious and that the future lay with labor market analysis and labor market signaling. This book disputes this but acknowledges that the models of the past should be supplemented with better data and improved labor market analysis and in doing so produces its own model for analyzing the needs of labor markets.
Practical Ultrasound in Anesthesia for Critical Care and Pain
Management is a stand-alone comprehensive reference that covers
important aspects of ultrasound for the practicing
anesthesiologist. Beginning with a background on the physics of
equipment and practical applications, this text takes the
specialist through subjects like needle visualization, teaching,
training, accreditation, and getting the best out of your
ultrasound equipment. With high-resolution ultrasound photographs
Practical Ultrasound in Anesthesia for Critical Care and Pain
Management covers topics that explore: vascular access nerve
blockade echocardiography transesophageal echocardiography -
evaluation of the valves basic echo Doppler transesophageal Doppler
transcranial Doppler the respiratory system Also included is a
fully developed CD, that includes high-resolution video clips of
actual ultrasound examples, organized in an easy cross-referenced
fashion for the busy clinician.
Praise for Counterfeiting EXPOSED "This book is the bible on anticounterfeiting. It is everything a company or individual needs to enlighten and protect themselves from this ever-increasing crime." –– Frank W. Abagnale author of Catch Me If You Can and The Art of the Steal "This book tells you absolutely everything you need to know about the trade in fakes and what to do about it –– and then adds a bit more. It is immensely detailed, thoroughly researched, and well set out. Above all, it is readable and the ideas and information flow in an appropriately structured way. My copy will get dog-eared very quickly." ––John Anderson Chairman, The Global Anti-Counterfeiting Group
This authoritative and comprehensive 1996 publication looks in
depth at a range of medical syndromes characterised by serious and
unpredicted internal overheating of the body. These episodes may
arise suddenly and unexpectedly in certain individuals, with
life-threatening consequences, either as a result of heat stress,
exceptional physical exertion or in response to certain common
anaesthetics and some drugs, including ecstasy. The chapters focus
on the full range of these syndromes, their metabolic and
physiological basis, the important pre-disposing factors for the
prediction of those at risk, and the medical management of these
conditions. The volume includes important contributions from
authors of international repute and incorporates a wealth of
information from the Leeds malignant hyperthermia investigation
unit. This compilation will be of interest to those wanting to
understand these disorders.
Focusing on a number of contemporary research themes and placing
them within the context of palpable changes that have occurred
within football in recent years, this timely collection brings
together essays about football, crime and fan behaviour from
leading experts in the fields of criminology, law, sociology,
psychology and cultural studies.
This authoritative and comprehensive 1996 publication looks in
depth at a range of medical syndromes characterised by serious and
unpredicted internal overheating of the body. These episodes may
arise suddenly and unexpectedly in certain individuals, with
life-threatening consequences, either as a result of heat stress,
exceptional physical exertion or in response to certain common
anaesthetics and some drugs, including ecstasy. The chapters focus
on the full range of these syndromes, their metabolic and
physiological basis, the important pre-disposing factors for the
prediction of those at risk, and the medical management of these
conditions. The volume includes important contributions from
authors of international repute and incorporates a wealth of
information from the Leeds malignant hyperthermia investigation
unit. This compilation will be of interest to those wanting to
understand these disorders.
This book enables the reader to understand labour markets and shows
how to forecast the need for skills in developing countries. The
forecasting of these skills has recently fallen into disrepute with
the notion that all forecasting techniques that assessed the labour
market requirements of the future were dubious and that the future
lay with labour market analysis and labour market signalling. This
book disputes this but acknowledges that the models of the past
should be supplemented with better data and improved labour market
analysis and in doing so produces its own model for analysing the
needs of labour markets.
This book is the first study of the role of British Ambassadors in
shaping Anglo-American relations during the first generation of the
'special relationship'. As well as showing how ambassadors wielded
influence in Washington and helped to formulate British foreign
policy, it offers insights into the role of the embassy in modern
diplomacy.
American philanthropy has historically been a solitary pursuit
defined by individual donor action and fragmented, uncoordinated
grantmaking. But in recent years, foundations have begun to come
together in groups to take on shared initiatives and agendas.
InCollaborative Philanthropies, Elwood M. Hopkins-himself the
executive director of the successful collaborative Los Angeles
Urban Funders-argues that these funder collaboratives are more than
a collection of isolated experiments. Instead, they provide a
window into a dramatic and promising new stage in the development
of organized philanthropy. For anyone aspiring to play a leadership
role in the philanthropic field, this book lays out a visionary
blueprint for smarter, more effective philanthropy in the
twenty-first century.
Britain and the Cold War, 1945-1964 offers new perspectives on ways
in which Britain fought the Cold War, and illuminates key areas of
the policy formulation process. It argues that in many ways Britain
and the United States perceived and handled the threat posed by the
Communist bloc in similar terms: nevertheless, Britain's continuing
global commitments, post-war economic problems and somestic
considerations obliged her on occasion to tackle the threat rather
differently.
The book examines the evolution of one of the most important
technologies that has emerged in the last fifty years:
biotechnology - the use of living organisms, or parts thereof to
create useful products and services. The most important application
of biotechnology has been in medicine, in the development of new
drugs. The central purpose of the book is to explain how firms
based in the US took the lead in commercialising the technology,
and why it has been so difficult for firms in other countries to
match what the leading American companies have achieved. The book
looks at the institutions and policies which have underpinned US
success in biotechnology. This is the US innovation "ecosystem,"
and it is made up of several interlocking elements which constitute
a powerful competitive advantage for US biotechnology firms. These
include, a higher education system which has close links with
industry, massive support from the Federal government for
biomedical research, and a financial system which is well equipped
to support young entrepreneurial firms in a science-based industry.
In the light of US experience the book examines in detail the
performance of UK biotechnology firms over the past forty years,
starting with the creation of the UK's first dedicated biotech
firm, Celltech, in 1980. The book shows how the UK made a promising
start in the 1980s and 1990s but failed to build on it. Several
leading firms failed, and after an initial burst of enthusiasm
investors lost confidence in the British biotech sector. It is only
the last few years that the sector has staged a revival, attracting
fresh investment from the US as well from the UK. The story told in
this book, based on extensive interviews with industry
participants, investors, and policy makers in the UK, Continental
Europe, and the US, sheds new light on one of the central issues
facing governments in the advanced industrial countries - how to
create and sustain new science-based industries.
A study of the differing views of the conscript based on evidence
along the eastern border of France. The popular idea of the
swaggering military folk-hero, a potent image for the
peasant-conscript, contrasts with the elitist viewof conscription
as "the nation in arms". Revolutionary France gave the modern world
the concept of the "nation-in-arms", a potent combination of
nationalism, militarism and republicanism embodied in the figure of
the conscript. But it was not a concept shared by those most
affected by conscription, the peasantry, who regarded the soldier
as representative of an entirely different way of life.
Concentrating on the militarised borderlands of eastern France,
this book examines the disjuncture between the patriotic
expectations of elites and the sentiments expressed in popular
songs, folktales and imagery. Hopkin follows the soldier through
his life-cycle to show how the peasant recruit was separated from
his previous life and re-educated in military mores; and he
demonstrates how the state-sponsored rituals of conscription and
the popular imagery aimed at adolescent males portrayed the army as
a place where young men could indulge in adventure far from
parental and communal restraints. The popular idea of moustachioed
military folk-heroes contributed more to the process of turning
"peasants into Frenchmen" than the mythology of the
"nation-in-arms". WINNER OF THE 2002 RHS GLADSTONE PRIZE. David M.
Hopkin is tutor and fellow in history at Hertford College, Oxford
University.
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