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This timely book offers a detailed, multidisciplinary view on the
radical changes in higher education caused by the COVID-19
pandemic. Chapters carefully investigate how the pandemic led to
massive disruption in the sector, examining the contentious
politics involved, and managerial and policy changes that stemmed
from this unprecedented crisis. Dually focused on recent events and
imminent futures, this insightful book addresses questions raised
about the nature of post-pandemic learning, for instance
interrogating digital changes and their permanency. Institutional
changes are observed on three different levels: micro, meso and
macro. Ultimately this book successfully recounts past events and
hypothesizes potential future developments within the sector.
Building the Post-Pandemic University will be crucial for students
engaging in critical university studies, education policy, digital
sociology and higher education studies. It will also be of interest
for university policy makers seeking to understand the impact of
COVID-19 on the higher education system.
Bone and joint tuberculosis is common in developing countries, and
surgeons in these countries are often faced with the dual problem
of diagnosing and treating this disease. However, bone and joint
tuberculosis has not yet completely disappeared from industrialized
countries, either. Therefore, this book is also intended for
orthopedic surgeons in industrialized countries, who, faced with
the rare but characteristic problems posed by bone and joint
tuberculosis, are searching for reliable solutions. The last
comprehensive textbook on this subject appeared more than 20 years
ago, and that was a third edition of a pre-war work. Advances in
chemotherapy had made this edition out-of-date even before it was
published. The need for a definite up-to-date textbook has
therefore been acute. The present book has been written to fill
that need, and is based not only upon 20 years' experience with 700
cases, but also upon the results of clinical, bacteriologic,
pathologic, and therapeutic research.
In recent years every major institution has had to adapt to the
fast-evolving technologies of the digital age or risk being left
behind. Amid a global crisis of faith and declining levels of
religious participation in places around the world, the Catholic
Church has likewise come face to face with the challenges and
possibilities of new media. Sacred Cyberspaces reveals how
long-standing conflicts over power, influence, and legitimacy
within religious organizations are being waged in the digital
realm. Oren Golan and Michele Martini describe the tensions that
arise as religious groups seek to reach the faithful in online
spaces where traditional clerical authorities have less expertise
and control. Focusing on the Catholic world, they examine the rise
of devotional digital entrepreneurship and the roles of lay
religious webmasters: the video makers, app developers, and web
designers who devote their lives to evangelization and who
literally run the show. The book also explores the nature of
religious experience as it pivots to online platforms:
cyberculture, prayer, ceremonies, pilgrimage, proselytization, and
the relation to the transcendental. From live-streaming at
world-famous sites in the Holy Land to the Instagram feed of Pope
Francis, Sacred Cyberspaces evaluates the contemporary media
strategies of the Catholic Church and sheds light on the future of
religion online.
In recent years every major institution has had to adapt to the
fast-evolving technologies of the digital age or risk being left
behind. Amid a global crisis of faith and declining levels of
religious participation in places around the world, the Catholic
Church has likewise come face to face with the challenges and
possibilities of new media. Sacred Cyberspaces reveals how
long-standing conflicts over power, influence, and legitimacy
within religious organizations are being waged in the digital
realm. Oren Golan and Michele Martini describe the tensions that
arise as religious groups seek to reach the faithful in online
spaces where traditional clerical authorities have less expertise
and control. Focusing on the Catholic world, they examine the rise
of devotional digital entrepreneurship and the roles of lay
religious webmasters: the video makers, app developers, and web
designers who devote their lives to evangelization and who
literally run the show. The book also explores the nature of
religious experience as it pivots to online platforms:
cyberculture, prayer, ceremonies, pilgrimage, proselytization, and
the relation to the transcendental. From live-streaming at
world-famous sites in the Holy Land to the Instagram feed of Pope
Francis, Sacred Cyberspaces evaluates the contemporary media
strategies of the Catholic Church and sheds light on the future of
religion online.
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