|
Showing 1 - 23 of
23 matches in All Departments
This book examines the evolution, function, problems and prospects
of private security companies in the maritime sector. The private
security industry continues to evolve after its renaissance over
the past few decades, first in Africa, and later in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Despite this, little academic work has been done to
date on the role of private security in the maritime environment.
This lacuna has become more pronounced as the threat of piracy,
terrorism, and other acts of maritime political violence have
caused littoral states and commercial entities alike to consider
the use of private security to mitigate risks. Maritime Private
Security is an edited volume specifically dedicated to combating
the absence of academic research in this area. The discussion of
this multi-faceted subject is organised into four key parts: Part
I: The Historical and Contemporary Market in Maritime Private
Security Services Part II: The Emergence of Private Anti-Piracy
Escorts in the Commercial Sector Part III: The Privatization of
Coast Guard Services Part IV: Private Security Responses to
Maritime Terrorism This book will be of much interest to students
of naval policy and maritime security, private security companies,
piracy and terrorism, international law and IR in general.
Printed Writings 1641-1700, Series II, Part One consists of seven
volumes of writings grouped by genre. The set comprises the
following titles: Volume 1: Life Writings I Volume 2: Life Writings
II Volume 3: Mother's Advice Books Volume 4: Writings on Medicine
Volume 5: Educational and Vocational Books Volume 6: Almanacs
Volume 7: Miscellaneous Plays
Printed Writings 1500-1640, Series I, Part Two consists of thirteen
volumes of writings by and about early modern Englishwomen. The set
comprises the following titles: Volume 1: Anne Cooke Bacon Volume
2: Brief Confessional Writings: Grey, Stubbes, Livingstone,
Clarksone Volume 3: Eleanor Davies Volume 4: Early Tudor
Translators: Margaret Beaufort, Margaret More Roper and Mary Basset
Volume 5: Elizabeth and Mary Tudor Volume 6: Anne, Margaret and
Jane Seymour Volume 7: Neo-Latin Women Writers: Elizabeth Jane
Weston and Bathsua Reginald (Makin) Volume 8: Mother's Advice Books
Volume 9: Jane Owen Volume 10: The Poets, I: Whitney, Dowriche,
Melville (Colville), Lanyer, Speght and Primrose Volume 11: The
Poets II: Mary Fage Volume 12: Protestant Translators: Anne Lock
Prowse and Elizabeth Russell Volume 13: Recusant Translators:
Elizabeth Cary and Alexia Grey
The discovery and re-examination of women authors has been a key
part of early modern women's studies, but a major problem has been
the inaccessibility of the texts themselves. This series is
designed to make available a comprehensive collection of writing in
English from 1500 to 1700, both by women and for and about them.
Each text is preceded by a short introduction providing an overview
of the life and work of the writer, along with a survey of
important relevant scholarship. The series is in two parts,
covering the periods 1500 to 1640, and 1641 to 1700. It is
complemented by a separate facsimile series of essential works and
original monographs.
The only reliable clues available about Anne Wheathill's life are
those contained in her work, published in 1584. She describes
herself as a gentlewoman, unmarried and a Protestant. She also
refers to herself as poor and it has been suggested that she was
one of a handful of women in Elizabeth I's reign who attempted to
earn money by writing. A handfull of holesome (though homelie)
hearbs is an example of the English Reformer's efforts to revise
the Roman Catholic primers and Books of Hours to satisfy the
private devotional needs of a Protestant middle class. Although
Anne Wheathill apologises for her inexperience and lack of learned
counsel, her text requires no apology for reprinting in this
facsimile edition. It is the work of someone who has mastered the
cadence of the best English religious prose of her age.
The discovery and re-examination of women authors has been a key
part of early modern women's studies, but a major problem has been
the inaccessibility of the texts themselves. This series is
designed to make available a comprehensive collection of writing in
English from 1500 to 1700, both by women and for and about them.
Each text is preceded by a short introduction providing an overview
of the life and work of the writer, along with a survey of
important relevant scholarship. The series is in two parts,
covering the periods 1500 to 1640, and 1641 to 1700. It is
complemented by a separate facsimile series of essential works and
original monographs.
This book examines the evolution, function, problems and prospects
of private security companies in the maritime sector. The private
security industry continues to evolve after its renaissance over
the past few decades, first in Africa, and later in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Despite this, little academic work has been done to
date on the role of private security in the maritime environment.
This lacuna has become more pronounced as the threat of piracy,
terrorism, and other acts of maritime political violence have
caused littoral states and commercial entities alike to consider
the use of private security to mitigate risks. Maritime Private
Security is an edited volume specifically dedicated to combating
the absence of academic research in this area. The discussion of
this multi-faceted subject is organised into four key parts: Part
I: The Historical and Contemporary Market in Maritime Private
Security Services Part II: The Emergence of Private Anti-Piracy
Escorts in the Commercial Sector Part III: The Privatization of
Coast Guard Services Part IV: Private Security Responses to
Maritime Terrorism This book will be of much interest to students
of naval policy and maritime security, private security companies,
piracy and terrorism, international law and IR in general.
One of the few theological formulas of medieval times to survive
the scrutiny of the Reformation was that of the infernal triad of
the sins of the Flesh, the World, and the Devil. Through a close
analysis of the structural and thematic role that this triad plays
in Books I and II of the Faerie Queene and in Paradise Lost,
Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes, Patrick Cullen explores
the imaginative continuity between two of the greatest poets of the
English Renaissance, Edmund Spenser and John Milton. By presenting
the two poets in a single focus. Professor Cullen demonstrates the
profound indebtedness of Milton to Spenser, a relationship which
has not received due scholarly attention, despite Milton's praise
of Spenser as "a better teacher than Aquinas" and his admission
according to Dryden, that Spenser was his "original." Professor
Cullen's new approach allows him to define a clear allegorical
lineage between some of the major poems of the period,
demonstrating the imaginative affinity of Spenser and Milton with
great concreteness and specificity. Originally published in 1975.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
These editions preserve the original texts of these important books
while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions.
The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase
access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of
books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in
1905.
The demands of producing high quality, pathogen-free food rely
increasingly on natural sources of antimicrobials to inhibit food
spoilage organisms, foodborne pathogens and toxins. Discovery and
development of new antimicrobials from natural sources for a wide
range of applications requires that knowledge of traditional
sources for food antimicrobials is combined with the latest
technologies in identification, characterization and application.
This book explores some novel, natural sources of antimicrobials as
well as the latest developments in using well-known antimicrobials
in food. Covering antimicrobials derived from microbial sources
(bacteriophages, bacteria, algae, fungi), animal-derived products
(milk proteins, chitosan, reduction of biogenic amines), plants and
plant-products (essential oils, phytochemicals, bioactive
compounds), this book includes the development and use of natural
antimicrobials for processed and fresh food products. New and
emerging technologies concerning antimicrobials are also discussed.
One of the few theological formulas of medieval times to survive
the scrutiny of the Reformation was that of the infernal triad of
the sins of the Flesh, the World, and the Devil. Through a close
analysis of the structural and thematic role that this triad plays
in Books I and II of the Faerie Queene and in Paradise Lost,
Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes, Patrick Cullen explores
the imaginative continuity between two of the greatest poets of the
English Renaissance, Edmund Spenser and John Milton. By presenting
the two poets in a single focus. Professor Cullen demonstrates the
profound indebtedness of Milton to Spenser, a relationship which
has not received due scholarly attention, despite Milton's praise
of Spenser as "a better teacher than Aquinas" and his admission
according to Dryden, that Spenser was his "original." Professor
Cullen's new approach allows him to define a clear allegorical
lineage between some of the major poems of the period,
demonstrating the imaginative affinity of Spenser and Milton with
great concreteness and specificity. Originally published in 1975.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
These editions preserve the original texts of these important books
while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions.
The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase
access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of
books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in
1905.
|
You may like...
Recipes
SuzelleDIY
Paperback
R295
R231
Discovery Miles 2 310
Bok To Bok
Mike Greenaway
Hardcover
R599
R449
Discovery Miles 4 490
|