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In today's economy, job loss will likely affect each of us at some
point in our careers. Layoffs used to happen only when times were
tough, but even a bustling economy is no protection when positions
are eliminated, plants are closed, and jobs are shipped overseas in
search of even higher profit margins. A toolkit for survival and
coping with unemployment, this book explains how to minimize your
chances of being laid off, how to negotiate the best outcome during
the severance process, and how to re-enter the job market from a
position of strength. This book is as important for employers,
human resource managers, and outplacement specialists as it is for
employees. Just as employees need to be aware of their rights and
options, employers need to understand the ramification of their
actions. This book provides an understanding of the hiring and
firing process from both perspectives. Issues include: How to
examine and negotiate your termination package How to determine if
you need an attorney--and how to select one How to prove your
dismissal was inappropriate or illegal How to move from a bad job
situation to a better one
Recent advances in research show that the distinctive features of
high medieval civilization began developing centuries earlier than
previously thought. The era once dismissed as a "Dark Age" now
turns out to have been the long morning of the medieval millennium:
the centuries from AD 500 to 1000 witnessed the dawn of
developments that were to shape Europe for centuries to come. In
2004, historians, art historians, archaeologists, and literary
specialists from Europe and North America convened at Harvard
University for an interdisciplinary conference exploring new
directions in the study of that long morning of medieval Europe,
the early Middle Ages. Invited to think about what seemed to each
the most exciting new ways of investigating the early development
of western European civilization, this impressive group of
international scholars produced a wide-ranging discussion of
innovative types of research that define tomorrow's field today.
The contributors, many of whom rarely publish in English, test
approaches extending from using ancient DNA to deducing cultural
patterns signified by thousands of medieval manuscripts of saints'
lives. They examine the archaeology of slave labor, economic
systems, disease history, transformations of piety, the experience
of power and property, exquisite literary sophistication, and the
construction of the meaning of palace spaces or images of the
divinity. The book illustrates in an approachable style the
vitality of research into the early Middle Ages, and the signal
contributions of that era to the future development of western
civilization. The chapters cluster around new approaches to five
key themes: the early medieval economy; early medieval holiness;
representation and reality in early medieval literary art;
practices of power in an early medieval empire; and the
intellectuality of early medieval art and architecture. Michael
McCormick's brief introductions open each part of the volume;
synthetic essays by accomplished specialists conclude them. The
editors summarize the whole in a synoptic introduction. All Latin
terms and citations and other foreign-language quotations are
translated, making this work accessible even to undergraduates. The
Long Morning of Medieval Europe: New Directions in Early Medieval
Studies presents innovative research across the wide spectrum of
study of the early Middle Ages. It exemplifies the promising
questions and methodologies at play in the field today, and the
directions that beckon tomorrow.
Apply the industrial engineering science of invention and assembly
to how software is described, planned, and built, allowing you to
be free to flex your practices according to your needs, putting
principle over habit and rules.Reading about Agile practices is
like reading diet advice. Everything sounds unique and good;
everything starts with good intentions. Then reality sets in.
Organizations adapt their practices, but lose sight of grounding
principles. A bias toward ceremonies, metrics, and recipes comes at
the expense of efficiently getting the real work done. Managers and
developers are incentivized to game the system. Organizational
metrics become detached from the reality of what is being delivered
and how.The Agile Codex shows you how to describe a software
project as an acyclic dependency tree of sized work items, scoped
to be operated on by one software engineer each and completed
within a week. It provides Open Source tooling to help you
visualize, sequence and assign these work items to account for risk
and increase predictability in your delivery times. You'll see the
value of doing this as it applies to efficiently planning and
adjusting software projects in the face of learning and change.
Finally, the book covers the collaborative agile principles
required to bring this skill set and practice to a software
team.Throughout the book you'll be reminded that software
engineering is not a rote task - it is primarily a skilled,
creative act. As such, you'll see that we need to account for the
space needed to research, plan, create, and adjust. The Agile
practices serving the codex deal with this intersection between the
engineering problem of software delivery flow, and the human
reality of how work is described, owned, executed, and transitioned
from one state to another.Everything an agile team does must serve
the codex. The creation and the care and feeding of this structured
tree of work sets the frame in which all other team actions take
place and against which all successes or failures can be evaluated.
Nearly a century after it was first published in 1925, "Medieval
Cities" remains one of the most provocative works of medieval
history ever written. Here, Henri Pirenne argues that it was not
the invasion of the Germanic tribes that destroyed the civilization
of antiquity, but rather the closing of Mediterranean trade by Arab
conquest in the seventh century. The consequent interruption of
long-distance commerce accelerated the decline of the ancient
cities of Europe. Pirenne challenges conventional wisdom by
attributing the origins of medieval cities to the revival of trade,
tracing their growth from the tenth century to the twelfth. He also
describes the important role the middle class played in the
development of the modern economic system and modern culture.
Featuring a new introduction by Michael McCormick, this
Princeton Classics edition of "Medieval Cities" is essential
reading for all students of medieval European history.
The Roman triumph's resurgence is documented from the Tetrarchy through the end of the Macedonian dynasty in Byzantium and to Charlemagne's successors in the early medieval West.
This is the first comprehensive analysis of the economic transition from antiquity to the Middle Ages in over sixty years. It brings fresh evidence to bear on the fall of the Roman empire and the origins of the medieval economy. The book uses new material from recent excavations, and develops a new method for the study of hundreds of travelers to reconstitute the communications infrastructure that conveyed those travelers--ship sailings, overland routes--linking Europe to Africa and Asia, from the time of the later Roman empire to the reign of Charlemagne and beyond.
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