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This innovative book sets out to rethink corporate social
responsibility (CSR) in global value chains. Peter Lund-Thomsen
considers how CSR is often framed and promoted by key actors in the
Global North, the home of many large retailers and brands, in ways
that overlook the unique challenges and broader circumstances faced
by suppliers and countries in the Global South. He instead proposes
that CSR must be understood as an evolving, context-dependent, and
contested term that can best be viewed through multiple
perspectives. Developing an integrated analytical model of buyer,
supplier, and worker perspectives on CSR in global value chains,
the book draws out future research and policy implications of this
analysis in the areas of governance, human rights, the circular
economy, and climate change. This book will be a critical resource
for scholars and students with an interest in corporate social
responsibility, critical management studies, management and
sustainability, and responsible consumption and production.
Practitioners and policy makers in business, government,
international organizations, and NGOs will also benefit from the
book's re-evaluation of CSR in global value chains.
Business and Development Studies: Issues and Perspectives provides
a comprehensive collection of cutting-edge theoretical and
empirical contributions to the emerging field of business and
development studies. Compared to more traditional business-school
accounts of business in developing countries which focus on the
challenges and opportunities of doing business in developing
countries, this anthology explores whether, how, and under what
conditions business contributes to the achievement of economic,
social, and environmental goals in developing countries. The book
consolidates the current status of academic work on business and
development, identifies state of the art in relation to this
academic field, and establishes a future research agenda for
'business and development studies' as an emerging academic
discipline within the social sciences. The book will be of interest
to researchers and students, including economists, geographers,
sociologists, political scientists, corporate social responsibility
specialists, and development scholars who are seeking an in-depth
overview of current debates about the role of business as a
development agent in the Global South. The book is also of
relevance to practitioners that are engaged in work with the
private sector seeking to enhance the positive effects and minimize
the negative economic, social, and environmental consequences of
business activity in the Global South.
Business and Development Studies: Issues and Perspectives provides
a comprehensive collection of cutting-edge theoretical and
empirical contributions to the emerging field of business and
development studies. Compared to more traditional business-school
accounts of business in developing countries which focus on the
challenges and opportunities of doing business in developing
countries, this anthology explores whether, how, and under what
conditions business contributes to the achievement of economic,
social, and environmental goals in developing countries. The book
consolidates the current status of academic work on business and
development, identifies state of the art in relation to this
academic field, and establishes a future research agenda for
'business and development studies' as an emerging academic
discipline within the social sciences. The book will be of interest
to researchers and students, including economists, geographers,
sociologists, political scientists, corporate social responsibility
specialists, and development scholars who are seeking an in-depth
overview of current debates about the role of business as a
development agent in the Global South. The book is also of
relevance to practitioners that are engaged in work with the
private sector seeking to enhance the positive effects and minimize
the negative economic, social, and environmental consequences of
business activity in the Global South.
An industrious journalist and editor of periodicals, Peter Lund
Simmonds (1814 97) wrote across a range of subjects, including
natural history and applied science. An active member of the Royal
Society of Arts, he first published this dictionary in 1858.
Reissued here in its revised and enlarged edition of 1867, it
contains more than 22,000 entries. The curious can discover within
that a calcar is a furnace in a glassworks, or that the best kind
of Cuban tobacco is known as calidad. Readers will also learn that
the hautboy can be either eaten or played, being the name for both
a wild strawberry and a form of oboe. Testifying to the
proliferation of manufactured goods in the nineteenth century, and
the contemporary desire to diffuse 'sound and useful knowledge
among the masses', this work will appeal to readers interested in
the history and lexicon of trade and technology."
In May 1845, the famous Arctic explorer John Franklin (1786-1847)
embarked on another attempt to find the elusive North-West Passage.
He never returned from this voyage, and was last seen by whalers in
Baffin Bay in July 1845. Some thirty rescue missions were launched
between 1847 and 1859 to find the missing men. Franklin was not the
first explorer to make the dangerous voyage to find the route
connecting the Atlantic and Pacific, and journalist Peter Lund
Simmonds (1814-97) draws from a wide range of reports and
publications about these expeditions in his history of the search
for the North-West Passage, published in 1851. The detailed account
also includes descriptions of the many missions to find Franklin,
and this second edition was published later in the same year as the
first in order to include updated reports on the progress of his
rescue.
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Gene Cloning (Paperback)
Julia Lodge, Peter Lund, Steve Minchin
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R2,144
Discovery Miles 21 440
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The ability to successfully clone genes underlies the majority
of our knowledge in molecular and cellular biology. Gene Cloning
introduces the diverse array of techniques available to clone genes
and how they can be used effectively both in the research
laboratory, to gain knowledge about the gene, and for use in
biotechnology, medicine, the pharmaceutical industry, and
agriculture. It shows how cloning genes is an integral part of
genomics and underlines its relevance in the post-genomic age, as a
tool required to test predictions of gene regulation and function
made through bioinformatics. Applications of gene cloning in
medicine, both for diagnosis and treatment, and in the
pharmaceutical industry and agriculture, are also covered in the
book.
Gene Cloning takes a fresh approach to teaching molecular and
cellular biology and will be a valuable resource to both
undergraduates and lecturers of biological and biomedical science
courses.
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