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Elgar Research Agendasoutline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are give n the space to explore their
subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions
of travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Forward-looking
and innovative, Elgar Research Agendas are an essential resource
for PhD students, scholars and anybody who wants to be at the
forefront of research. This timely book utilises the specialised
insights and experiences of those who have carried out research on
different aspects of social welfare law and policy to construct an
innovative post-Brexit and post-Covid 19 research agenda that
identifies what needs to be studied and how this should be carried
out. Embracing not only social welfare law but also social welfare
policy, practice and impact, expert contributors consider major
areas of non-economic law, such as asylum and immigration law,
health law, social care law, social work and child welfare law,
social security law, and issues involving social rights. Individual
chapters cover branches of social welfare law, four areas of social
welfare policy, four distinctive methodological approaches, and
three contemporary developments. They reflect a wide-ranging set of
substantive concerns and methodological approaches and, taken
together, comprise a challenging but non-prescriptive research
agenda. This Research Agenda will be a key resource for socio-legal
researchers contemplating research on social welfare law and
policy, as well as research councils, government departments and
charitable bodies that fund research on social welfare law and
policy.
First Published in 1994. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
The book subjects the largely hidden phenomenon of benefit
sanctions in the UK to sustained examination and critique. It
comprises twelve chapters dealing with the terms 'cruel', 'inhuman'
and 'degrading' that are used as a benchmark for assessing benefit
sanctions; benefit sanctions as a matter of public concern; the
historical development of benefit sanctions in the UK; changes in
the scope and severity of benefit sanctions; conditionality and the
changing relationship between the citizen and the state; the impact
and effectiveness of benefit sanctions; benefit sanctions and
administrative justice; the role of law in protecting the right to
a social minimum; a comparison of benefit sanctions with court
fines; benefit sanctions and the rule of law; and what, if
anything, can be done about benefit sanctions. Each chapter ends
with a paragraph that attempts to highlight the most salient points
in that chapter, and the book ends with a short conclusion in which
benefit sanctions are assessed against the chosen benchmark.
"Discourse, Power and Justice" is a distinctive and theoretically
informed, empirical study of the administration of the Scottish
prison system. It is based on extensive research and combines
theoretical innovation with detailed empirical evidence. The book
is located at a confluence of two academic sub-disciplines and
their associated literature, socio-legal studies of justice and the
sociology of knowledge, which are combined to produce a novel
theoretical framework. The authors focus on the activities of those
who manage the prison system. They identify the most important
social actors in the prison system, located both historically and
comparatively, and examine their characteristic forms of discourse.
A number of crucial areas of decision-making are analyzed in depth
including decisions about the initial classification of prisoners,
transfers around the system and the allocation of prisoners to
different forms of work. A major focus of the book is on the
different forms and mechanisms of accountability and the book
concludes with an analysis of recent policy changes. Adler has
published "Parential Choice and Educational Policy" (Ediburgh
University Press, 1989) and "Justice Di
Originally printed in 1922, this is the Record of Service of the
Jewish race in the British and Empire Forces during the Great
War.As well as an outline story of the service of British Jewry it
includes:- a Roll of Honour of the Dead, showing their unit, date
of death, and home addess; records of honours and awards including
citations for Military Crosses; Distinguished Conduct Medals; a
nominal roll of Jews serving in His Majesty's Forces.On a Regiment
by Regiment basis, a photographic record of the fallen and their
memorials.Also including group photographs.
This memoir portrays the dreadful experiences of Camillo Adler and
his family as Austrian refugees in France following the outbreak of
WWII. Despite his suffering in internment camps, Adler feels bound
by honor and duty to fight against the brutal Nazi regime. He
enlists into the French Foreign Legion, enduring its rigors of
harsh basic training in Algeria and Morocco and eventually returns
home after France's swift surrender to Germany in the summer of
1940. To escape the Holocaust during the gruesome German
occupation, the family with its two small children flees in a
precarious journey to Switzerland. The book vividly depicts life in
the Swiss refugee camps and the family's eventual unification. Long
after Camillo Adler's death in 1985, his son Michel, the
translator, discovered Camillo Adler's original German manuscripts,
written in 1944. Beyond an account of events, his story is an
intimate window into the conditions of the period, the
ramifications of human action and inaction and into the
thought-world of the many Jewish refugees during that tumultuous
time.
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Poplar Street (Paperback)
Adrienne Adler Downs, Michele Adler
bundle available
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R341
Discovery Miles 3 410
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Poplar Street is a lively book about growing up in a
multi-generational Catholic household in the mid-century American
South. Raised in a family whose ancestors helped settle Memphis,
Tennessee, Adrienne Adler Downs and Michele Adler share stories
about a father who needed adult supervision, a take-no-prisoners
grandmother who cheerfully admitted she married for the money, and
a raucous celebration that resulted in their Poplar Street house
being unofficially blacklisted by the officials of a local men's
college. Through it all was a stoic grandfather, a Rosary-praying
mother, a ghost or two, a host of convivial cousins, and a
Grand-Central-Station atmosphere that kept the whole family in a
state of high alert. "The mystery of family bonds can never be
understood, only appreciated," the authors write in Poplar Street's
preface. Readers will say the same thing about the book.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
This book comprises a definitive collection of papers on
administrative justice, written by a set of very distinguished
contributors. It is divided into five parts, each of which contains
articles on a particular aspect of administrative justice. Part 1
deals with the impact of 'contextual changes' on administrative
justice and considers the implications of changes in governance and
public administration, management and service delivery, information
technology, audit and accounting, and human rights for
administrative justice. Part 2 looks at conceptual issues and
describes a number of competing approaches to administrative
justice. Part 3 discusses the application of administrative justice
principles to private law disputes, while Part 4 examines the
distinctive characteristics of administrative justice in three
other jurisdictions. Part 5 focuses on the current developments in
administrative justice, with a conclusion that deals with
legislative and policy developments in the UK. The general approach
of the book is socio-legal and interdisciplinary. The chapters
adopt a variety of disciplinary perspectives, including those
derived from political science, public policy, social policy,
accounting, and information technology, as well as from law.
Included is a section titled "Comparative Perspectives on
Administrative Justice," with comparative analyses of Australia,
Scandinavia, and continental Europe. The book will be of interest
to lawyers - particularly those with interests in administrative
law - and to social scientists - particularly those with interests
in public administration, public policy, and public management.
Originally printed in 1922, this is the Record of Service of the
Jewish race in the British and Empire Forces during the Great
War.As well as an outline story of the service of British Jewry it
includes:- a Roll of Honour of the Dead, showing their unit, date
of death, and home addess; records of honours and awards including
citations for Military Crosses; Distinguished Conduct Medals; a
nominal roll of Jews serving in His Majesty's Forces.On a Regiment
by Regiment basis, a photographic record of the fallen and their
memorials.Also including group photographs.
The Delphi Method is an exercise in group communication. It is
intended to enhance informed decision-making by enabling decision
makers to plan based on a wide reservoir of knowledge, experience
and expertise in a systematic manner. The book is divided into two
parts: Part 1 contains chapters on theoretical, methodological and
practical issues - inclusing computerisation - which are raised by
the Delphi Method while Part 2 consists of a series of case studies
which illustrate the application fo the Delphi Method to a range of
problems in social policy and public health. The case studies show
how the Delphi Method has been used to study furture trends in
mental health and mental health care, services for the elderly,
accidents, family planning services, the implications of advances
in biomedical and behavioural research and the administration of
social security.
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