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Who holds the power in financial markets? For many, the answer
would probably be the large investment banks, big asset managers,
and hedge funds that are often in the media's spotlight. But more
and more a new group of sovereign investors, which includes some of
the world's largest sovereign wealth funds, government pension
funds, central bank reserve funds, state-owned enterprises, and
other sovereign capital-enabled entities, have emerged to become
the most influential capital markets players and investment firms,
with $30 trillion in assets under management ("super asset
owners"). Their ample resources, preference for lower profile,
passive investing, their long-time horizon and adherence to
sustainability as well as their need to diversify globally and by
sector have helped to transform the investment world and, in
particular, private markets for digital companies. They have helped
create and sustain an environment that has fostered the rise of the
likes of Uber, Alibaba, Spotify and other transformative players in
the digital economy, while providing their founders and business
models the benefit of long-term capital. Despite this increasingly
important impact, sovereign investors remain mostly unknown, often
maintaining a low profile in global markets. For the same reason,
they're also among the most widely misunderstood, as many view
investments made by sovereign investors as purely driven by
political aims. The general perception is that most sovereign
investors lack transparency and have questionable governance
controls, causing an investee nation to fear exposure to risks of
unfair competition, data security, corruption, and non-financially
or non-economically motivated investments. The current global
tensions around the AI race and tech competition - and now the
corona virus pandemic - have exacerbated such misperceptions,
spawning controversies around sovereign investors and capital
markets, governments, new technologies, cross-border investments,
and related laws and regulations. As such, sovereign capital and
the global digital economy are undergoing an unprecedented,
contentious moment. In short, the emergence of sovereign funds
symbolizes a major shift of the world's economic power. For the
first time, investment funds from developing countries are playing
with OECD financial giants as equals. Furthermore, their
investments into high tech enable them to participate at the
cutting-edge of the fourth industrial revolution, challenging
traditional innovation powerhouses like the US and Germany. For all
stakeholders, from tech unicorns, VC funds, asset managers,
financial firms, to policymakers, law firms, academics, and the
general public, this is the must-have book to get to know these new
venture capitalists and "super asset owners".
This book reconstructs the foundations of developmental and
educational psychology and fills an important gap in the field by
arguing for a specific spatial turn so that human growth,
experience and development focus not only on time but space. This
regards space not simply as place. Highlighting concrete
cross-cultural relational spaces of concentric and diametric
spatial systems, the book argues that transition between these
systems offers a new paradigm for understanding agency and
inclusion in developmental and educational psychology, and for
relating experiential dimensions to causal explanations. The
chapters examine key themes for developing concentric spatial
systemic responses in education, including school climate,
bullying, violence, early school leaving prevention and students'
voices. Moreover, the book proposes an innovative framework of
agency as movement between concentric and diametric spatial
relations for a reconstruction of resilience. This model addresses
the vital neglected issue of resistance to sheer cultural
conditioning and goes beyond the foundational ideas of
Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory, as well as Vygotsky,
Skinner, Freud, Massey, Bruner, Gestalt and postmodern psychology
to reinterpret them in dynamic spatial systemic terms. Written by
an internationally renowned expert, this book is a valuable
resource for academics, researchers and postgraduate students in
the areas of educational and developmental psychology, as well as
related areas such as personality theory, health psychology, social
work, teacher education and anthropology.
Concentric Space as a Life Principle beyond Schopenhauer, Nietzsche
and Ricoeur invites a fresh vision of human experience and search
for life meanings in terms of potential openings through relational
space. Offering a radical spatial rereading of foundational ideas
of influential thinkers Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and Ricoeur, it
argues that these ideas can be rethought for a more fundamental
understanding of life, self and other. This book offers a radical
reconceptualisation of space as an animating principle for life
through common, although previously hidden, features across the
thought of Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and Ricoeur. It offers a fresh
spatial interpretation of key themes in these thinkers' works, such
as compassion, will to life, Dionysian rapture, will to power,
selfovercoming, re-valuation of values, eternal recurrence, living
metaphor and intersubjectivity. It proposes a spatial restructuring
of experience from diametric spaces of exclusion towards concentric
spaces of inclusion for an experiential restructuring towards
unifying modes of experience. This spatial rereading of these major
figures in philosophy directly challenges many previous
understandings, to offer a distinctive spatial-phenomenological
framework for examining a life principle. This book will appeal to
academics, researchers and postgraduates engaged in the study of
philosophy, wellbeing, education and human development. The book's
interdisciplinary scope ensures that it is also of interest for
those in the fields of psychology, anthropology, psychoanalysis and
culture studies.
Concentric Space as a Life Principle beyond Schopenhauer, Nietzsche
and Ricoeur invites a fresh vision of human experience and search
for life meanings in terms of potential openings through relational
space. Offering a radical spatial rereading of foundational ideas
of influential thinkers Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and Ricoeur, it
argues that these ideas can be rethought for a more fundamental
understanding of life, self and other. This book offers a radical
reconceptualisation of space as an animating principle for life
through common, although previously hidden, features across the
thought of Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and Ricoeur. It offers a fresh
spatial interpretation of key themes in these thinkers' works, such
as compassion, will to life, Dionysian rapture, will to power,
selfovercoming, re-valuation of values, eternal recurrence, living
metaphor and intersubjectivity. It proposes a spatial restructuring
of experience from diametric spaces of exclusion towards concentric
spaces of inclusion for an experiential restructuring towards
unifying modes of experience. This spatial rereading of these major
figures in philosophy directly challenges many previous
understandings, to offer a distinctive spatial-phenomenological
framework for examining a life principle. This book will appeal to
academics, researchers and postgraduates engaged in the study of
philosophy, wellbeing, education and human development. The book's
interdisciplinary scope ensures that it is also of interest for
those in the fields of psychology, anthropology, psychoanalysis and
culture studies.
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Urban Legendz
Paul Downs, Nick Bruno; Artworks by Michael Yates
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R198
Discovery Miles 1 980
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection. A group of young
vigilantes roam the streets of Brooklyn solving supernatural
crimes. After his mother’s death, Dwayne is forced to uproot
himself and move into the home where his mother grew up: a shabby
apartment in Brooklyn. When your dad is a police officer, and your
brother’s too cool for school, what's an insecure teen supposed
to do? Dwayne’s personal problems are cast aside when he joins a
new crew of young vigilantes, devoted to solving a series of
sinister cases surrounding mysterious monsters that have been
wreaking havoc throughout the city. What if all of the Urban
Legends we all fear...were real?
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Urban Legendz (Hardcover)
Nick Bruno, Paul Downs; Illustrated by Michael Yates
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R373
R268
Discovery Miles 2 680
Save R105 (28%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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After his mother's death, teen Dwayne is forced to uproot himself
and move into the home where his mother grew up: a shabby apartment
in Brooklyn. Overshadowed by his socially salient older brother,
and pressured by his policeman father, Dwayne often feels out of
place, a sentiment that is only intensified in these unfamiliar
surroundings. Before too long, however, his personal problems are
cast aside when he gets suckered into joining a new crew of young
vigilantes, devoted to solving a series of sinister cases
surrounding mysterious monsters that have been wreaking havoc
throughout the city.
This book argues that a silent axis of the unconscious world rests
largely undiscovered. It recasts foundational concepts in the
psychology of Freud, Jung, Carol Gilligan and R.D. Laing, as well
as in cognitive science, to highlight this hidden unconscious axis:
primordial spaces of diametric and concentric structures. The
author generates fresh approaches to understanding the philosophy
of early Heidegger and Derrida, with the idea of cross-cultural
diametric and concentric spaces fuelling a radical reinterpretation
of early Heidegger's transcendental project, and challenging a
postmodern consensus that reduces truths and experiences to mere
socially constructed playthings of culture. The book, which also
examines projected structures in modernist art, suggests a
systematic refashioning of many Western assumptions, but it is more
than a deconstruction. It also attempts to offer a new interplay
between structures and meaning, as a spatial phenomenology. This
significant expansion of the boundaries of human subjectivity opens
alternative pathways for imagining what it means to be human, in
order to challenge the reduction of experience to instrumental
reason.
This book reconstructs the foundations of developmental and
educational psychology and fills an important gap in the field by
arguing for a specific spatial turn so that human growth,
experience and development focus not only on time but space. This
regards space not simply as place. Highlighting concrete
cross-cultural relational spaces of concentric and diametric
spatial systems, the book argues that transition between these
systems offers a new paradigm for understanding agency and
inclusion in developmental and educational psychology, and for
relating experiential dimensions to causal explanations. The
chapters examine key themes for developing concentric spatial
systemic responses in education, including school climate,
bullying, violence, early school leaving prevention and students'
voices. Moreover, the book proposes an innovative framework of
agency as movement between concentric and diametric spatial
relations for a reconstruction of resilience. This model addresses
the vital neglected issue of resistance to sheer cultural
conditioning and goes beyond the foundational ideas of
Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory, as well as Vygotsky,
Skinner, Freud, Massey, Bruner, Gestalt and postmodern psychology
to reinterpret them in dynamic spatial systemic terms. Written by
an internationally renowned expert, this book is a valuable
resource for academics, researchers and postgraduate students in
the areas of educational and developmental psychology, as well as
related areas such as personality theory, health psychology, social
work, teacher education and anthropology.
Hobbes, Sovereignty, and Early American Literature pursues the
question of democratic sovereignty as it was anticipated, theorized
and resisted in the American colonies and in the early United
States. It proposes that orthodox American liberal accounts of
political community need to be supplemented and challenged by the
deeply controversial theory of sovereignty that was articulated in
Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan (1651). This book offers a radical
re-evaluation of Hobbes's political theory and demonstrates how a
renewed attention to key Hobbesian ideas might inform inventive
re-readings of major American literary, religious and political
texts. Ranging from seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Puritan
attempts to theorize God's sovereignty to revolutionary and
founding-era debates over popular sovereignty, this book argues
that democratic aspiration still has much to learn from Hobbes's
Leviathan and from the powerful liberal resistance it has
repeatedly provoked.
This book identifies key elements of an international framework to
develop systems-level change to promote access to education,
including higher education, for socio-economically marginalized
groups. It is based on interviews with senior government officials
and senior management in universities, non formal education and
prisons across 12 countries in Europe. The book identifies systemic
obstacles to and opportunities for promotion of access to education
for socio-economically excluded groups that are issues transferable
to other countries’ contexts. It adopts a systemic focus on
access across a range of domains of education, both formal higher
education and non-formal education, as well as prison education.
Through a focus on a more dynamic structuralist systems framework
it develops an innovative post-Bronfenbrennerian view of system
levels in lifespan developmental and educational psychology. It
also develops an international agenda for reform in relation to
these various system levels for access to education for
socio-economically marginalized groups, through extraction of key
structural indicators to evaluate reform progress in a transparent,
culturally sensitive manner. The book identifies current gaps and
strengths in policy, practice and structures that impact upon
access to education, including higher education, across a range of
countries. These gaps and strengths are illustrative and are to
inform a strategic approach to system level change and development
for the promotion of access to education for socio-economically
marginalized groups in Europe and beyond. “Too many educational
practices entrench social exclusion: it is an urgent priority
across Europe that social justice policies are implemented for the
inclusion of marginalised groups. Paul Downes' analysis of these
issues is timely. His conclusions are considered and practical:
this book is a valuable and constructive resource for
practitioners, academics and the policy community.” Professor
Alistair Ross, Jean Monnet ad Personam Professor of Citizenship
Education in Europe, Emeritus Professor of Education, Institute for
Policy Studies in Education, London Metropolitan University
Paul Downes combines literary criticism and political history in
order to explore responses to the rejection of monarchism in the
American revolutionary era. Downes' analysis considers the
Declaration of Independence, Franklin's autobiography, Crevecoeur's
Letters from an American Farmer and the works of America's first
significant literary figures including Charles Brockden Brown,
Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper. He claims that the
post-revolutionary American state and the new democratic citizen
inherited some of the complex features of absolute monarchy, even
as they were strenuously trying to assert their difference from it.
In chapters that consider the revolution's mock execution of George
III, the Elizabethan notion of the 'king's two bodies' and the
political significance of the secret ballot, Downes points to the
traces of monarchical political structures within the practices and
discourses of early American democracy. This is an ambitious study
of an important theme in early American culture and society.
Paul Downes offers a radical revision of some of the most cherished elements of early American cultural identity. The founding texts and writers of the Republic, he claims, did not wholly displace what they claimed to oppose. Instead, Downes argues, the entire construction of a Republican public sphere actually borrowed and adapted central features of Monarchical rule. Downes discovers this theme not only in a wide range of American novels, but also in readings of a variety of political documents that created the philosophical culture of the American revolutionary period.
This book identifies key elements of an international framework
to develop systems-level change to promote access to education,
including higher education, for socio-economically marginalized
groups. It is based on interviews with senior government officials
and senior management in universities, non formal education and
prisons across 12 countries in Europe. The book identifies systemic
obstacles to and opportunities for promotion of access to education
for socio-economically excluded groups that are issues transferable
to other countries' contexts. It adopts a systemic focus on access
across a range of domains of education, both formal higher
education and non-formal education, as well as prison education.
Through a focus on a more dynamic structuralist systems framework
it develops an innovative post-Bronfenbrennerian view of system
levels in lifespan developmental and educational psychology. It
also develops an international agenda for reform in relation to
these various system levels for access to education for
socio-economically marginalized groups, through extraction of key
structural indicators to evaluate reform progress in a transparent,
culturally sensitive manner. The book identifies current gaps and
strengths in policy, practice and structures that impact upon
access to education, including higher education, across a range of
countries. These gaps and strengths are illustrative and are to
inform a strategic approach to system level change and development
for the promotion of access to education for socio-economically
marginalized groups in Europe and beyond.
""Too many educational practices entrench social exclusion: it
is an urgent priority across Europe that social justice policies
are implemented for the inclusion of marginalised groups. Paul
Downes' analysis of these issues is timely. His conclusions are
considered and practical: this book is a valuable and constructive
resource for practitioners, academics and the policy community.""
Professor Alistair Ross, Jean Monnet "ad Personam "Professor of
Citizenship Education in Europe, Emeritus Professor of Education,
Institute for Policy Studies in Education, London Metropolitan
University
**A Forbes Best Business Book of the Year, 2015** **Winner of the
2015 800-CEO-READ Business Book Award in Entrepreneurship** When
columnist Paul Downs was approached by The New York Times to write
for their "You're the Boss" blog, he had been running his custom
furniture business for twenty-four years strong. or mostly strong.
Now, in his first book, Downs paints an honest portrait of a real
business, with a real boss, a real set of employees, and the real
challenges they face. Fresh out of college in 1986, Downs opened
his first business, a small company that builds custom furniture.
In 1987, he hired his first employee. That's when things got
complicated. As his enterprise began to grow, he had to learn about
management, cash flow, taxes, and so much more. But despite any
obstacles, Downs always remained keenly aware that every small
business, no matter the product it makes or the service it
provides, starts with people. He writes with tremendous insight
about hiring employees, providing motivation to get the best out of
them, and the difficult decisions he's made to let some of them go.
Downs also looks outward, to his dealings with vendors and to
providing each client with exemplary customer service from first
sales pitch to final delivery. With honesty and conviction, he
tells the true story behind building and sustaining a successful
company in an ever-evolving economy, often airing his own failures
and shortcomings to reveal the difficulties that arise from being a
boss and a businessperson. Countless employees have told the story
of their experience with managers--Boss Life tells the other side
of that story. From the Hardcover edition.
"New American Landscape" is a collection of 27 international
artists showcasing over 100 images discussing the social and
environmental state of the United States of America. Through
interviews and artist statements, author David Downs fleshes out
the significance of these artists working today into six chapters
of critical discourse. Through painting, photography, sculpture,
digital media, and more; these artists redefine how the United
States and its people are represented in contemporary art.
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