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Patrick Daniel is the Institute of Policy Studies' 11th S R Nathan
Fellow for the Study of Singapore. This book is an edited
collection of his three IPS-Nathan Lectures, delivered in February
and March 2022, and includes highlights of his question-and-answer
segments with our audience.Mr Daniel analyses the evolution of
Singapore's legacy media from colonial times and examines how the
country's unique history has shaped its media laws. In recent
years, the Internet disrupted the business models of the legacy
media and forced them to reinvent themselves in order to compete
with big tech platforms. As for the proliferation of wilful
misinformation and digital fraud around the world, the book
examines whether the Internet and social media require more
effective global governance. Mr Daniel concludes by looking into
the future and outlining desired futures for Singapore and its
legacy media.The IPS-Nathan Lecture series was launched in 2014 as
part of the S R Nathan Fellowship for the Study of Singapore, named
after Singapore's sixth and longest-serving president. It seeks to
advance public understanding and discussion of issues of critical
national interest for Singapore.
Patrick Daniel is the Institute of Policy Studies' 11th S R Nathan
Fellow for the Study of Singapore. This book is an edited
collection of his three IPS-Nathan Lectures, delivered in February
and March 2022, and includes highlights of his question-and-answer
segments with our audience.Mr Daniel analyses the evolution of
Singapore's legacy media from colonial times and examines how the
country's unique history has shaped its media laws. In recent
years, the Internet disrupted the business models of the legacy
media and forced them to reinvent themselves in order to compete
with big tech platforms. As for the proliferation of wilful
misinformation and digital fraud around the world, the book
examines whether the Internet and social media require more
effective global governance. Mr Daniel concludes by looking into
the future and outlining desired futures for Singapore and its
legacy media.The IPS-Nathan Lecture series was launched in 2014 as
part of the S R Nathan Fellowship for the Study of Singapore, named
after Singapore's sixth and longest-serving president. It seeks to
advance public understanding and discussion of issues of critical
national interest for Singapore.
Do you ever feel like everyone around you is succeeding, leaving
you behind feeling unhappy and unsatisfied with your life? Ever
wonder how some people succeed while others only dream about it? In
Finding Your Road to Success, author Patrick Daniel answers your
questions and reveals a step-by-step approach to building roadmaps
that lead you straight to the top. Patrick demonstrates how anyone
can achieve success and shares the secrets to happiness, wealth,
and Ultimate success!
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Little Tomb (Paperback)
Patrick Daniel Keck
bundle available
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R831
R693
Discovery Miles 6 930
Save R138 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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During the ten years between his diagnosis and cure of Hepatitis C,
Patrick Daniel explored many treatment options. His healing journey
encompassed conventional pharmaceutical treatments as well as
holistic and natural remedies. Finding reliable information was a
much more challenging task than he could have anticipated; often
beset by frustration in having to resort to trial and error
tactics. Now cured, Mr. Daniel guides the reader though the
recovery process, finally putting to rest the misinformation and
bad advice that he and so many others have encountered for far too
long. He writes from the trenches of hepatitis C survival with a
clear and practical voice about what the disease and its treatment
are really like. A firsthand account along with up-to-date
treatments and information on current ground breaking clinical
trials makes this a must read for anyone who has, or is living with
someone who has Hepatitis C.
In 2006 and 2007, a 94km-long gas pipeline was excavated across the
Pennines, from Pannal in North Yorkshire, to Nether Kellet in
Lancashire (N/W England). Around twenty archaeological excavations
were undertaken to mitigate the impact of the construction of the
pipeline on the archaeology of the route, and these form the
subject of this volume. The excavated remains were generally slight
and were widely scattered along the route; the range of periods
they represent is equally broad and intermittent. The earliest
finds represented are Mesolithic flint scatters, with some evidence
of Bronze Age activity, but very little evidence of settlement or
land division, a pattern which broadly continues throughout the
area's history.
Archaeological investigations in response to the expansion of Pode
Hole sand and gravel quarry (Cambridgeshire, east England), exposed
a well-preserved prehistoric Fen-edge landscape covering an area of
approximately 24 hectares. Pottery dates and a series of
radiocarbon determinations reveal that the site was occupied
throughout the second millennium BC, with activity apparently
intensifying later in that period. A substantial assemblage of
locally made Bronze Age pottery and other artefacts was gathered
during the excavations.
The construction of the Asselby to Pannal natural gas pipeline has
provided an important opportunity to investigate the early
landscapes of North and West Yorkshire. A combination of
non-intrusive and intrusive archaeological techniques has been
employed, over a five-year period by Oxford Archaeology North and
Network Archaeology Ltd, in order to explore the archaeology along
the pipeline. The archaeological investigation included the
large-scale excavation of 14 archaeological sites, and 136
evaluation trenches. The results of this work will greatly enhance
understanding of the archaeology of the southern part of the Vale
of York, the Magnesian Limestone areas of North and West Yorkshire,
and the eastern margins of the Pennine uplands. Within these
distinct landscapes, evidence for early prehistoric through to
post-medieval period activity was discovered. However, the majority
of excavated remains date to the Iron Age and Roman period, and
relate to the creation of field systems and schemes of land
division, as well as settlements and enclosures. In addition, parts
of the South Dyke and Becca Banks, which form elements of the
Aberford Dykes complex, were examined, and this has provided fresh
insights into the chronology and use of these important monuments.
The volume arises from a multi-disciplinary approach to the
archaeology, with the emphasis placed on interpreting the sites
within their wider landscape context. It includes the work of a
range of authors, drawn from Oxford Archaeology and Network
Archaeology Ltd, and also several external specialists.
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