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Showing 1 - 21 of
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Ticks: Biology, Ecology and Diseases provides a detailed overview
of the fascinating world of tick biology and ecology. This book
discusses disease transmission to humans and livestock, assesses
the impact of human behavior and climate change on tick biology,
and details how this will affect future disease transmission.
Written by an expert on ticks and their transmitted diseases, this
book explores the unique biology of ticks and how it influences the
transmission of some of the most devastating diseases. In a series
of detailed chapters, the book provides up-to-date information on
the interrelationship between ticks and the vertebrates they feed
on. In addition, the book covers information on recent scientific
discoveries surrounding ticks, along with reviews on control
methods and disease transmission. Other sections cover the recent
emergence of tick-borne pathogens, making this book an ideal source
for interested scientists, clinicians, veterinarians and experts in
the field of tick biology.
"The Role of Animals in Emerging Viral Diseases" presents what
is currently known about the role of animals in the emergence or
re-emergence of viruses including HIV-AIDS, SARS, Ebola, avian flu,
swine flu, and rabies. It presents the structure, genome, and
methods of transmission that influence emergence and considers
non-viral factors that favor emergence, such as animal
domestication, human demography, population growth, human behavior,
and land-use changes.
When viruses jump species, the result can be catastrophic,
causing disease and death in humans and animals. These zoonotic
outbreaks reflect several factors, including increased mobility of
human populations, changes in demography and environmental changes
due to globalization. The threat of new, emerging viruses and the
fact that there are no vaccines for the most common zoonotic
viruses drive research in the biology and ecology of zoonotic
transmission.
In this book, specialists in 11emerging zoonotic viruses present
detailed information on each virus's structure, molecular biology,
current geographic distribution, and method of transmission. The
book discusses the impact of virus emergence by considering the
ratio of mortality, morbidity, and asymptomatic infection and
assesses methods for predicting, monitoring, mitigating, and
controlling viral disease emergence.
Analyzes the structure, molecular biology, current geographic
distribution and methods of transmission of 10 virusesProvides a
clear perspective on how events in wildlife, livestock, and even
companion animals have contributed to virus outbreaks and
epidemicsExemplifies the "one world, one health, one medicine"
approach to emerging disease by examining events in animal
populations as precursors to what could affect humans"
This book applies cutting-edge economic analysis and social science
to unpack the rich complexities and paradoxes of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution. The book takes the reader on a bold,
refreshing, and informative tour through its technological drivers,
its profound impact on human ecosystems, and its potential for
sustainable human development. The overarching message to the
reader is that the Fourth Industrial Revolution is not merely
something to be feared or survived; rather, this dramatic collision
of technologies, disciplines, and ideas presents a magnificent
opportunity for a generation of new pioneers to rewrite "accepted
rules" and find new avenues to empower billions of people to
thrive. This book will help readers to discern the difference
between disruption and transformation. The reader will come away
from this book with a deeply intuitive and highly contextual
understanding of the core technological advances transforming the
world as we know it. Beyond this, the reader will clearly
appreciate the future impacts on our economies and social
structures. Most importantly, the reader will receive an insightful
and actionable set of guidelines to assist them in harnessing the
Fourth Industrial Revolution so that both they and their
communities may flourish. The authors do not primarily seek to make
prescriptions for government policy, but rather to speak directly
to people about what they can do for themselves, their families,
and their communities to be future-proofed and ready to adapt to
life in a rapidly evolving world ecosystem.
This book applies cutting-edge economic analysis and social science
to unpack the rich complexities and paradoxes of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution. The book takes the reader on a bold,
refreshing, and informative tour through its technological drivers,
its profound impact on human ecosystems, and its potential for
sustainable human development. The overarching message to the
reader is that the Fourth Industrial Revolution is not merely
something to be feared or survived; rather, this dramatic collision
of technologies, disciplines, and ideas presents a magnificent
opportunity for a generation of new pioneers to rewrite "accepted
rules" and find new avenues to empower billions of people to
thrive. This book will help readers to discern the difference
between disruption and transformation. The reader will come away
from this book with a deeply intuitive and highly contextual
understanding of the core technological advances transforming the
world as we know it. Beyond this, the reader will clearly
appreciate the future impacts on our economies and social
structures. Most importantly, the reader will receive an insightful
and actionable set of guidelines to assist them in harnessing the
Fourth Industrial Revolution so that both they and their
communities may flourish. The authors do not primarily seek to make
prescriptions for government policy, but rather to speak directly
to people about what they can do for themselves, their families,
and their communities to be future-proofed and ready to adapt to
life in a rapidly evolving world ecosystem.
Instead of treating modernism principally as a thing of the past,
this volume highlights modernism as an impulse that can be carried
forward to the present, re-embodied and re-encountered in
theatrical performance. It demonstrates how modernist impulses
spark contemporary theatre in electric and dynamic ways, continuing
the modernist imperative to 'make it new' and to engage
meaningfully with the complicated situation of living in the
contemporary world. Through a diverse set of contributions from
scholars and theatre practitioners, this book examines the legacy
of modernism on the world stage in acts of remembrance, restaging,
transmission and slippage. It investigates both well-known and less
familiar aspects of modernist theatre history, engaging topics such
as the revival of the first Black American musical, feminist and
disability-led reinterpretations of canonical modernist plays, the
use of modernist-inspired performance practice in contemporary
university arts education and the continually contested meaning and
importance of the avant-garde.
Beckett remains one of the most important writers of the twentieth
century whose radical experimentations in form and content won him
the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969. This Critical Companion
encompasses his plays for the stage, radio and television, and will
be indispensable to students of his work. Challenging and at times
perplexing, Beckett's work is represented on almost every
literature, theatre and Irish studies curriculum in universities in
North America, Europe and Australia. Katherine Weiss' admirably
clear study of his work provides the perfect companion,
illuminating each play and Beckett's vision, and investigating his
experiments with the body, voice and technology. It includes
in-depth studies of the major works Waiting for Godot, Endgame and
Krapp's Last Tape, and as with other volumes in Methuen Drama's
Critical Companions series it features too a series of essays by
other scholars and practitioners offering different critical
perspectives on Beckett in performance that will inform students'
own critical thinking. Together with a series of resources
including a chronology and a list of further reading, this is ideal
for all students and readers of Beckett's work.
Chronicling the underappreciated black tradition of bearing arms
for self-defense, this book presents an array of examples reaching
back to the pre--Civil War era that demonstrate a willingness of
African American men and women to use firearms when necessary to
defend their families and communities. From Frederick Douglass's
advice to keep "a good revolver" handy as defense against slave
catchers to the armed self-protection of Monroe, North Carolina,
blacks against the KKK chronicled in Robert Williams's "Negroes
with Guns," it is clear that owning firearms was commonplace in the
black community.
Nicholas Johnson points out that this story has been submerged
because it is hard to reconcile with the dominant narrative of
nonviolence during the civil rights era. His book, however,
resolves that tension by showing how the black tradition of arms
maintained and demanded a critical distinction between private
self-defense and political violence.
Johnson also addresses the unavoidable issue of young black men
with guns and the toll that gun violence takes on many in the inner
city. He shows how complicated this issue is by highlighting the
surprising diversity of views on gun ownership in the black
community. In fact, recent Supreme Court affirmations of the right
to bear arms resulted from cases led by black plaintiffs.
Surprising and informative, this well-researched book strips away
many stock assumptions of conventional wisdom on the issue of guns
and the black freedom struggle.
Beckett's Voices / Voicing Beckett uses 'voice' as a prism to
investigate Samuel Beckett's work across a range of texts, genres,
and performance cultures. Twenty-one contributors, all members of
the Samuel Beckett Working Group of the International Federation
for Theatre Research, discuss the musicality of Beckett's voices,
the voice as 'absent other', the voices of the vulnerable, the
cinematic voice, and enacted voices in performance and media. The
volume engages not only with Beckett's history and legacy, but also
with many of the central theoretical issues in theatre studies as a
whole. Featuring testimonies from Beckett practitioners as well as
emerging and established scholars, it is emblematic of the thriving
and diverse community that is twenty-first century Beckett Studies.
Contributors: Svetlana Antropova, Linda Ben-Zvi, Jonathan Bignell,
Llewellyn Brown, Julie Campbell, Thirthankar Chakraborty, Laurens
De Vos, Everett C. Frost, S. E. Gontarski, Mariko Hori Tanaka,
Nicholas E. Johnson, Kumiko Kiuchi, Anna McMullan, Melissa Nolan,
Cathal Quinn, Arthur Rose, Teresa Rosell Nicolas, Jurgen Siess,
Anna Sigg, Yoshiko Takebe, Michiko Tsushima
Democracies are under attack in many countries including our own.
Wannabe dictators feel threatened by democracies existence. Their
destructive efforts are abetted by democracies citizen apathy. This
book examines the institutions, the columns that support democracy.
They include such institutions as independent media, K-12 and
higher education, respected, independent judges, accessible voting
systems, and public libraries. These institutions support both an
active citizenry and meaningful checks on executives abuses. This
book calls Americans to action with suggestions. It also contains
the author s columns an example of citizen use of the column of
democracy called media.
Test Pattern for Living is a kind of guidebook for anyone thinking
about what they are doing with their life and why -- whether happy
and wanting to stay that way, or working their way through one of
life's many stresses. As such it touches on everything from camping
to cooking, from religious values to the values of corporate
advertising, the role of love and sexuality, and many, many more
subjects. It leaves you making your own choices. But it frees you
to ask what other choices you might have made if corporate media
hadn't spent billions of dollars trying to persuade you to make the
choices that maximize their profits.
Notwithstanding the Internet, YouTube, and smart phones, TV remains
a major influence in the lives of American children and their
parents. Former FCC Commissioner Nicholas Johnson's How to Talk
Back to Your Television Set, when first published, was praised by
everyone from Tom Smothers to William Buckley, from John Kenneth
Galbraith to Fred Friendly, among others. The technology may have
changed, but many of the problems have only become worse.
Fortunately, many of the potential solutions remain the same. This
reissue of the book lays out what you can do -- plus what we
learned from "Forty Years of Wandering in the Wasteland."
From D.C. to Iowa, is a collection of the regular commentary of
Nicholas Johnson, former F.C.C. commissioner and author of How to
Talk Back to Your Television Set, congressional candidate, school
board member, columnist, TV host, policy wonk and satirist. From
presidential candidates through Iowa, to how to run a K-12 school
district, deal with college football, and students' binge drinking,
welfare for the wealthy, changing American marriage, privacy in the
digital age, and dozens of other topics, Johnson leaves no doubts
about what he thinks. This volume represents the first time his
blog entries from a single year have been brought together in a
book since FromDC2Iowa was launched in 2006.
In 1970 the author, then-FCC commissioner Nicholas Johnson, offered
his effort at predicting communications in the year 2000. In 2011,
now-Professor Johnson asked his law school students to take their
own 30-year look forward. This book lets you
Monday-morning-quarterback his 1970 predictions, and compare his
students efforts at "Predicting Our Future Cybelife" in 2040 with
your own digital hopes and fears.
Former FCC Commissioner Nicholas Johnson, whose How to Talk Back to
Your Television Set helped spark a media reform movement, is back
with more complaints and suggestions for understanding and
improving the mass media. Whatever your first priority, he urges,
everyone's second priority should be media reform.
Beckett remains one of the most important writers of the twentieth
century whose radical experimentations in form and content won him
the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969. This Critical Companion
encompasses his plays for the stage, radio and television, and will
be indispensable to students of his work. Challenging and at times
perplexing, Beckett's work is represented on almost every
literature, theatre and Irish studies curriculum in universities in
North America, Europe and Australia. Katherine Weiss' admirably
clear study of his work provides the perfect companion,
illuminating each play and Beckett's vision, and investigating his
experiments with the body, voice and technology. It includes
in-depth studies of the major works Waiting for Godot, Endgame and
Krapp's Last Tape, and as with other volumes in Methuen Drama's
Critical Companions series it features too a series of essays by
other scholars and practitioners offering different critical
perspectives on Beckett in performance that will inform students'
own critical thinking. Together with a series of resources
including a chronology and a list of further reading, this is ideal
for all students and readers of Beckett's work.
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