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This book sets out to navigate questions of the future of
Australian poetry. Deliberately designed as a dialogue between
poets, each of the four clusters presented here-"Indigeneities";
"Political Landscapes"; "Space, Place, Materiality"; "Revising an
Australian Mythos"-models how poetic communities in Australia
continue to grow in alliance toward certain constellated ideas.
Exploring the ethics of creative production in a place that
continues to position capital over culture, property over
community, each of the twenty essays in this anthology takes the
subject of Australian poetry definitively beyond Eurocentrism and
white privilege. By pushing back against nationalizing mythologies
that have, over the last 200 years since colonization, not only
narrativized the logic of instrumentalization but rendered our
lands precarious, this book asserts new possibilities of creative
responsiveness within the Australian sensorium.
This innovative edited collection brings together leading
international academics to explore the use of various
non-prescription and prescription substances. From a psychosocial
perspective, the authors discuss the complex reasons behind their
adoption, the ways in which they are misused, and links between use
and cognitive enhancement. While studies on substance use to date
have examined the aetiology and effects in the context of sporting
performance, addiction and recreational use, there has been little
work which explores their wider misuse to improve cognitive
enhancement. With medical sociology and social psychology at its
core, this important volume shows the complex reasons behind the
misuse of various substances, how these are connected to
contemporary desire for increased mental performance, and why the
potential health risks and possibly harmful side effects do not act
as deterrents.
This volume critically engages with the development of official
policy and reform in relation to the support of victims of crime
both within and beyond the criminal justice system of England and
Wales. Since the election of the Conservative/Liberal Democrat
Coalition Government in May 2010 it is argued that victimization
has increasingly taken on a greater cultural resonance both in
England and Wales and in other industrialised countries. Images of
terrorism, public debates around the handling of sexual
victimisation by the courts, and the issue of child sexual
exploitation have catapulted victim issues into the public
consciousness like never before - generating a new form of what
Hall terms 'victim capital'. As such, this book utilises a
combination of cultural victimological analysis, governance theory
and legal scholarship to address fundamental questions concerning
the drivers and impact of victim policy in England and Wales in the
21st century. An engaging and original study, this book will be of
particular interest to scholars of victimology and the criminal
justice system, as well as activists and policy makers.
This book critically examines both theory and practice around
conservation crimes. It engages with the full complexity of
environmental crimes and different responses to them, including:
poaching, conservation as a response to wildlife crime, forest
degradation, environmental activism, and the application of
scientific and situational crime prevention techniques as
preventative tools to deal with green crime. Through the
contributions of experts from both the social and ecological
sciences, the book deals with theoretical and practical
considerations that impact on the effectiveness of contemporary
environmental criminal justice. It discusses the social
construction of green crimes and the varied ways in which poaching
and other conservation crimes are perceived, operate and are
ideologically driven, as well as practical issues in environmental
criminal justice. With contributions based in varied ideological
perspectives and drawn from a range of academic disciplines, this
volume provides a platform for scholars to debate new ideas about
environmental law enforcement, policy, and crime prevention,
detection and punishment.
This innovative edited collection brings together leading
international academics to explore the use of various
non-prescription and prescription substances for the purpose of
perceived body image enhancement. While studies on drug misuse to
date have examined drug use in the context of sporting performance,
addiction, and body image for particular groups such as
bodybuilders, there has been little research that explores the
wider use (and misuse) of legal and illegal drugs for body image
development and weight loss. With medical sociology and social
psychology at its core, this important volume shows the complex
reasons behind the misuse of various medications, how these are
connected to contemporary body image and appearance concerns, and
why the known health risks and possibly harmful side effects do not
act as deterrents.
THE ACTION-PACKED THRILLER THAT FUSES BRAWN AND BRAINS Oxford
University has never employed a man like Leo Black before. Now an
adored lecturer destined for tenure among the gleaming spires, Leo
Black served the SAS for twenty years with distinction. When the
friend he fought alongside is killed in Paris trying to prevent the
abduction of a young British scientist, the world Leo has tried to
put behind him begins to reel him back in. But as Leo gets closer
to the startling truth about his friend's death, he faces a
difficult decision. Forget the training, the loyalty, the service
and be the man the university wants him to be . . . Or remember
that not so long ago, he was a truly exceptional soldier. Praise
for Matthew Hall 'Breathlessly enjoyable' The Times 'An
edge-of-the-seat thriller . . . should come with a health warning'
Irish Independent 'Fasten your seatbelts for a quality thriller . .
.' Independent on Sunday
Over the last thirty years, victims of crime have become a staple
topic of media interest and policy-making discourse.Drawing on an
extensive programme of first-hand empirical data gathered at some
300 English criminal trials, this book examines the practical
outcomes of this reform agenda and assesses the meaning,
implications and impact of the government's pledge to put victims
'at the heart' of the criminal justice system.The study also draws
on in-depth interviews with barristers and solicitors, as well as
court administrators and other Local Criminal Justice Board
members. The book delves into the policy-making process behind
these reforms, based on interviews conducted at key government
departments, and offers a model for what a genuinely 'victim
centred' criminal justice system might look like in the
twenty-first century, drawing on the psychological and sociological
literature on narrative responses to traumatic events.
Available Open Access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. The
concept of ‘generations’ has become a widely discussed area,
with recent events such as the COVID-19 pandemic revealing our
dependence on intergenerational relationships both within and
beyond the family. However, the concept can often be misunderstood,
which can fuel divisions between age groups rather than generating
solutions. This collection introduces and explores the growing
field of generational studies, providing a comprehensive overview
of its strengths and limitations. With contributions from academics
across a range of disciplines, the book showcases the concept’s
interdisciplinary potential by applying a generational lens to
fields including sociology, literature, history, psychology, media
studies and politics. Offering fresh perspectives, this original
collection is a valuable addition to the field, opening new avenues
for generational thinking.
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