|
Showing 1 - 19 of
19 matches in All Departments
In the time it takes to read this sentence, about fifteen people
will be added to the world's population. Read the sentence again,
and there will be thirty. Tomorrow, each of these people will be
demanding greater prosperity. Production and consumption are
increasing fast but will have to grow even faster in the future to
keep up with population growth and a world increasingly divided by
inequality. How should we react to these trends? Certainly, many
use growth figures to forecast disaster. But there is an
alternative vision: one of a sustainable future, in which growth is
seen not as a threat, but as the driving force behind innovation.
This is the scenario worked out in the Netherlands by Sustainable
Technology Development (STD), a five-year programme of research and
"learning-by-doing" based on setting up new innovation networks and
working with new methods to search for sustainable technological
solutions. In order to make sustainability tangible, STD made a
leap in time. What human needs will have to be satisfied fifty
years from now? Taking a sustainable future vision as a starting
point, STD demonstrated what steps we should take today for new
technologies and systems to be in place in time. These results are
now available for the first time in a comprehensive, specifically
written English-language book, together with a description of the
unique working method of STD and the results and key lessons from a
set of the programme's illustrative case studies. This book serves
as a manual for industry, governments and social leaders wanting to
prepare themselves for a sustainable future. Sustainable Technology
Development sets out the programme's underpinning philosophy and
describes its approach, methods and findings. Delivering
sustainability means finding ways to meet human needs using a
fraction of the natural resources we use today. The world's richer
nations would be wise to target at least ten-fold improvements by
2050 in the productivity with which conventional natural resources
and environmental services are used. And they need to bring new,
sustainable resources on-stream to augment the resource base and
replace the use of unsustainable alternatives. Sustainable
Technology Development marks a significant contribution to our
understanding of innovation processes and how these might be
influenced in favour of sustainable technology development. In
principle, technology could play a pivotal role in sustainable
development. Whether it does or not depends on whether innovators
can be encouraged to make this an explicit goal, adopt long-term
time-horizons and search for renewable technologies. Given the long
lead-times involved, there is no time to waste in beginning the
search. The STD programme has begun to make inroads into one of the
most urgent of all needs concerning sustainable development: that
for innovation in the innovation process itself.
Imagine moving from the suburbs to the inner city and colliding
with a school bully who's BIGGER, STRONGER, and FASTER than you.
What do you do? Curtis Powers is living this life! Ninth grade, at
a new school, is hard enough, without Treyshawn Jinkins making his
days miserable. Curtis just wants to pursue his dreams-now he's got
to avoid his nemesis, too!
Some call Curtis a geek; but his smarts won't stop the
inevitable. Treyshawn is coming fast and Curtis must do something
or face the worst beat-down of his life! With help from his family,
his best friend Kelly, and others, he'll put a hi-tech plan into
action that will do more than anyone thought possible. And in the
process he'll learn that 'when you can't outrun your problems, you
have to face them head on.'
The family continues to be seen as a central institution in Roman
as well as modern, Western society. The Roman family is often used
as a stereotype, sometimes of severity, sometimes of decadence,
with its decline often cited as a cause of wider decline and fall.
Definitions and concepts continue to be modified and nuanced,
however, as the availability of new evidence and new methodologies
make possible a much less simplistic picture. In this volume, the
study of the family draws on a wide range of disciplines to develop
the intertwined themes of status, sentiment, and space. For
example, on status there are contributions about Junian Latins and
a survey of senators' monuments, while sentiment is represented by
a gloomy but convincing picture of old age, and a paper on the
sentimental ideal which argues that conflict as well as concord is
a feature of Roman life. One of the contributions on space examines
who commemorates whom in Roman Italy, pointing up the regional
variations in custom and the difficulties in tracing complete
families. The final contributions focus on the house: how people
lived in the Roman house, the use of the rooms, and the artefacts
which might indicate this use. The book makes use of many types of
evidence - from the legal and literary to the iconographical and
archaeological. Visual and material evidence play an important role
in reconstructing real lives in considerable colour and variety.
The book moves beyond the city of Rome to the rest of Roman Italy
and even into the provinces, just as Roman culture moved outwards
and mingled with other cultures. Chronologically too there are new
directions, towards the later Empire and Christianity. So, although
the contributors do not abandon any of the territory already gained
in Rome, literary and epigraphic sources, and the late Republic or
early Empire, there is an exciting sense of new discovery.
The story of how Sussex, the oldest of the county clubs, finally
won the County Championship in 2003, 164 years after they were
founded. It tells the background behind the 1996 revolution that
made it all possible; explains just how the title was won; profiles
the major players in the drama; and talks to the merry ghosts of
other, failed campaigns.
The Roman family is a key concept in the understanding of Roman society at all levels, from the aristocratic elite to slaves. The intertwined themes of status, sentiment, and space, with the use of many types of evidence, from the legal and literary to the iconographical and archaeological, enable the contributors to this book to set out new insights into the family life of the people of Roman Italy.
The rapidly-evolving world of the 21st century faces tremendous
challenges of economic, ecological, social, cultural and global
dimensions to be handled by citizens with an increasing
self-consciousness. Naming just some of the challenges provides
immediate insight into their magnitude, nature and diversity:
reduce and prevent international instability, reduce over
exploitation of earth resources, respond to the greenhouse threat,
meet the needs of a rapidly growing global population, create a
fairer distribution of wealth, guide rural and urban development.
These are just some of the interrelated and interacting challenges
of developing sustainably in a highly dynamic and interconnected
world. They are characterised by the need for long-term approaches,
the involvement of many stakeholders with conflicting interests and
the fact that their approach demands parallel routes on different
scales.
These quotes were originally conceived as a memoir for the author's
infant daughter while he served in the military overseas. The
quotations in this book are timeless and reflect the wisdom and
inspiration that can be acquired through everyday situations. Some
of these thoughts can be profound enough to change lives or simple
enough to just enjoy the moment. Allow the words, thoughts and
reflections in this book to be your companion through moments of
tears and trouble onward to triumph. Use these words to produce
laughter, excitement and understanding, by reading a quote per day
or all at once. This book is an invitation to a good conversation,
and can be inspirational to move onward for the moment or for a
lifetime.
Imagine moving from the suburbs to the inner city and colliding
with a school bully who's BIGGER, STRONGER, and FASTER than you.
What do you do? Curtis Powers is living this life! Ninth grade, at
a new school, is hard enough, without Treyshawn Jinkins making his
days miserable. Curtis just wants to pursue his dreams-now he's got
to avoid his nemesis, too!
Some call Curtis a geek; but his smarts won't stop the
inevitable. Treyshawn is coming fast and Curtis must do something
or face the worst beat-down of his life! With help from his family,
his best friend Kelly, and others, he'll put a hi-tech plan into
action that will do more than anyone thought possible. And in the
process he'll learn that 'when you can't outrun your problems, you
have to face them head on.'
Who am I? What is my purpose? Everyone struggles with these
thoughts. Even if we do find answers to these questions, there are
still barriers that prevent us from discovering our true identity
and living free. Some barriers we put up ourselves, while some are
erected by others. Once we trust in God and discover how to break
through these barriers, we become so much stronger.
An anthology of poetry, short stories, and essays, "Transition"
recounts major moments and observations from the last ten years of
author Allen Paul Weaver III's life. He shares many deeply personal
aspects of his journey to self-discovery. He writes candidly about
his suicide attempt and life struggles. Allen also seeks insight
into the issues we all wrestle with: family, life, death,
education, career, prejudice, relationships, society, the nature of
God, and our destiny. No matter your gender or ethnic background,
the profound thoughts in "Transition" challenge you to improve
yourself and give you courage to break through the ever-present
barriers that we all face.
God has a purpose for your life Are you ready to take the
journey?
1966 - the year of English sporting legend. But, those 12 months
witnessed so much more than the all-important 30 July at Wembley.
This book revisits the time, recreates the atmosphere, talks to
those who were there (at Wembley and beyond), and builds a picture
of what we argued over, ate, worried about, listened to, wore and
watched in 1966.
|
You may like...
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
The Car
Arctic Monkeys
CD
R383
Discovery Miles 3 830
|