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Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
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Peppa Pig: Gift Box (DVD)
Morwenna Banks, Alice May, Lily Snowden-Fine, Richard Ridings, Oliver May; Contributions by …
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R135
Discovery Miles 1 350
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Collection of episodes of the popular children's animation. The
episodes are: 'Princess Peppa', 'Work and Play', 'The Rainbow',
'Pedro's Cough', 'The Library', 'The Camper Van', 'The Camping
Holiday', 'Compost', 'Richard Rabbit Comes to Play', 'Fun Run',
'Jumble Sale', 'The Quarrel', 'The Toy Cupboard', 'School Camp',
'Captain Daddy Pig', 'The Power Cut', 'Bouncy Ball', 'Stars',
'Daddy Pig's Birthday', 'Sleepover', 'International Day', 'Grampy
Rabbit's Boatyard', 'Shake, Rattle and Bang', 'Pottery', 'Mr Fox's
Van', 'Biggest Puddle in the World', 'Chatterbox', 'Chloe's Big
Friends', 'Edmond Elephant's Birthday', 'Gym Class', 'Champion
Daddy Pig', 'Secret Club', 'The New House', 'Basketball', 'Horsey
Twinkle Toes', 'Naughty Tortoise', 'Shadows', 'Mr Fox's Shop', 'The
Blackberry Bush', 'Mummy Rabbit's Bump', 'The Queen', 'Princess
Peppa and Sir George the Brave', 'My Birthday Party', 'Talent Day',
'Pirate Party', 'Treasure Hunt', 'Fancy Dress Party', 'Mummy Pig's
Birthday', 'School Play', 'Sleepy Princess', 'Mr Potato's Xmas
Show', 'The Rainy Day Game', 'Pedro the Cowboy', 'The Flying Vet',
'Kylie Kangaroo', 'Grampy Rabbit's Dinosaur Park', 'Captain Daddy
Dog', 'Peppa and George's Garden', 'Bedtime Story', 'Lost Keys',
'Flying On Holiday', 'The Holiday House', 'Holiday in the Sun',
'The End of the Holiday', 'George's New Dinosaur', 'Grandpa Pig's
Train to the Rescue', 'The Pet Competition', 'Spider Web', 'The
Noisy Night', 'The Wishing Well', 'Madame Gazelle's Leaving Party',
'Peppa's Circus', 'Desert Island', 'Perfume', 'The Aquarium',
'George's Racing Car', 'The Little Boat', 'Grampy Rabbit in Space',
'Night Animals', 'Mirrors', 'Pedro Is Late', 'Potato City',
'Whistling', 'Dr Hamster's Tortoise', 'Grandpa Pig's Computer',
'Hospital', 'Spring', 'Miss Rabbit's Helicopter', 'Baby Alexander',
'Grampy Rabbit's Lighthouse', 'Miss Rabbit's Day Off', 'Peppa's
Christmas', 'Pirate Island', 'Cuckoo Clock', 'Pretend Friend', 'The
Long Grass', 'The Dentist', 'Zoe Zebra, the Postman's Daughter',
'Nature Trail', 'Pen Pal', 'School Bus Trip' and 'Granny and
Grandpa's Attic'.
Confess Confess your love, your hate, your lust-everything. By the
time you are on your deathbed and feel the urge to do these things,
it will be far too late. The ears of the ones who need to hear the
confessions will not be there to hear your heartfelt truth that
they deserved to hear so many years ago. Don't wait until the hands
of time are wound so tightly that the beauty in your confessions no
longer exists. Do it as you feel it. The naked and raw outcome is
refreshing and peaceful.
Olive May has lived her entire life in lies and deceit, in all
ways. Every decision she has made arose not from truth and honesty,
but from treachery, masked by thoughts of judgment. She was born
the seventh child of a tormented woman, her mother dying within the
first year of her birth. Her father did not want her, but
eventually she was adopted by her mother's ex-husband and his new
wife; joining her mother's six other children created unusual
circumstances that laid the groundwork for her later problems.
Now she sees the pleasure in truth, and she longs to help others
see this light.
Many of the world's 40,000 International NGOs (INGOs) work in
places where terrorist financing, sanctions breaches, and diversion
are key risks. Almost all of the top ten recipient countries of
humanitarian aid alone in 2015 were high-risk jurisdictions, for
example, receiving more than GBP7bn between them. When they feel
safe to speak, sector workers share sobering stories about what
might have happened to some of this money. As INGOs struggle to
keep up with worsening humanitarian needs, diversion risks and
their complexity remain daunting. The demands of internal
stakeholders, donors, banks, and regulators are diverse and even
contradictory. Public scrutiny has magnified, but is not always
well-informed. Institutional donors transfer ever more risk to
implementing partners, while some banks seek to avoid this business
altogether, pushing some NGOs outside the global banking system.
Looming over all of these converging pressures is a latticework of
austere international sanctions and counter-terror regimes. It is
no surprise that INGOs find themselves struggling to reconcile this
complex set of expectations with their charitable missions. Yet the
consequences of failing to do so can be severe; future funding is
contingent on reputation, and serious offences litter the
regulatory landscape. The implications of breaches can be
existential for organisations and criminal for individuals.
Terrorist Diversion: A Guide to Prevention and Detection for NGOs
is an accessible, pragmatic guide for international NGOs of all
shapes and sizes. Clearly explaining the nature of the challenge,
and setting out a programme to meet it, it explores how it is
possible for INGOs to manage these risks more effectively through
their missions - not in spite of them.
There are an estimated 40,000 international Non-Government
Organisations (NGOs), working in an enormous global aid industry;
official development assistance alone reached GBP90bn in 2014. This
is supplemented by huge voluntary giving - the UK public, for
example, give around GBP1bn a year to overseas causes. These
organisations face a unique challenge from fraud and corruption.
Operating in the world's most under-developed and fragile
environments, with minimal infrastructure and trust-based cultures,
the risk is high. And, being wholly reliant on donors and
supporters for income, so are the stakes. Researchers make
different estimates of the scale of the problem facing the sector.
Some research implies that losses to the global aid budget caused
by occupational fraud and abuse may be in the billions of pounds,
while those to the British public's voluntary overseas donations
could be in the tens of millions. For many sector professionals
working in the developing world, these estimates are readily
believable. Fighting Fraud and Corruption in the Humanitarian and
Global Development Sector by Oliver May is a timely, accessible and
relevant how-to guide, which explores the scale and nature of the
threat, debunks pervasive myths, and shows readers how to help
their NGOs to better deter, prevent, detect and respond to fraud
and corruption.
There are an estimated 40,000 international Non-Government
Organisations (NGOs), working in an enormous global aid industry;
official development assistance alone reached GBP90bn in 2014. This
is supplemented by huge voluntary giving - the UK public, for
example, give around GBP1bn a year to overseas causes. These
organisations face a unique challenge from fraud and corruption.
Operating in the world's most under-developed and fragile
environments, with minimal infrastructure and trust-based cultures,
the risk is high. And, being wholly reliant on donors and
supporters for income, so are the stakes. Researchers make
different estimates of the scale of the problem facing the sector.
Some research implies that losses to the global aid budget caused
by occupational fraud and abuse may be in the billions of pounds,
while those to the British public's voluntary overseas donations
could be in the tens of millions. For many sector professionals
working in the developing world, these estimates are readily
believable. Fighting Fraud and Corruption in the Humanitarian and
Global Development Sector by Oliver May is a timely, accessible and
relevant how-to guide, which explores the scale and nature of the
threat, debunks pervasive myths, and shows readers how to help
their NGOs to better deter, prevent, detect and respond to fraud
and corruption.
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3 Go to School (Hardcover)
Oakley Graham; Illustrated by Olive May Green
1
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R289
Discovery Miles 2 890
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Confess Confess your love, your hate, your lust-everything. By the
time you are on your deathbed and feel the urge to do these things,
it will be far too late. The ears of the ones who need to hear the
confessions will not be there to hear your heartfelt truth that
they deserved to hear so many years ago. Don't wait until the hands
of time are wound so tightly that the beauty in your confessions no
longer exists. Do it as you feel it. The naked and raw outcome is
refreshing and peaceful.
Olive May has lived her entire life in lies and deceit, in all
ways. Every decision she has made arose not from truth and honesty,
but from treachery, masked by thoughts of judgment. She was born
the seventh child of a tormented woman, her mother dying within the
first year of her birth. Her father did not want her, but
eventually she was adopted by her mother's ex-husband and his new
wife; joining her mother's six other children created unusual
circumstances that laid the groundwork for her later problems.
Now she sees the pleasure in truth, and she longs to help others
see this light.
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