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The 2017 publication of Betrayal of the Promise, the report that detailed the systematic nature of state capture, marked a key moment in South Africa's most recent struggle for democracy. In the face of growing evidence of corruption and of the weakening of state and democratic institutions, it provided, for the first time, a powerful analysis of events that helped galvanise resistance within the Tripartite Alliance and across civil society.
Working often secretly, the authors consolidated, for the first time, large amounts of evidence from a variety of sources. They showed that the Jacob Zuma administration was not simply a criminal network but part of an audacious political project to break the hold of whites and white business on the economy and to create a new class of black industrialists. State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) such as Eskom and Transnet were central to these plans. The report introduced a whole new language to discuss state capture, showing how SOEs were `repurposed', how political power was shifting away from constitutional bodies to `kitchen cabinets', and how a `shadow state' at odds with the country's constitutional framework was being built.
Shadow State is an updated version of the original, explosive report that changed South Africa's recent history.
The study of moderation and mediation of youth treatment outcomes
has been recognized as enormously beneficial in recent years.
However, these benefits have never been fully documented or
understood by researchers, clinicians, and students in training.
After nearly 50 years of youth treatment outcome research,
identifying moderators and mediators is the natural next
step-shifting focus to mechanisms responsible for improved
outcomes, identifying youth who will benefit from certain
treatments or who are in need of alternative treatments, and
recognizing the challenges associated with the study of moderators
and mediators and their routine use in clinical practice.
Moderators and Mediators of Youth Treatment Outcomes examines
conceptual and methodological challenges related to the study of
moderation and mediation and illustrates potential treatment
moderators and mediators for specific disorders. The volume also
considers empirical evidence for treatment moderators and mediators
of specific disorders and illustrates how theoretical and empirical
knowledge regarding moderators and mediators can be harnessed and
disseminated to clinical practice. This book will be invaluable to
researchers conducting treatment outcome studies (both efficacy and
effectiveness), clinicians interested in evidence-based work and in
understanding for whom and why certain treatments work, and
students of clinical child and adolescent psychology and
psychiatry.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Catalysis literature can be difficult to read if there is not a
sufficient understanding of the underlying connections between the
chemical, materials and engineering aspects of catalysis. As a
result, many students lack the depth of knowledge to effectively
understand the topic.Introduction to Heterogeneous Catalysis solves
this issue by presenting not only the basic concepts of catalysis
but also, right from the beginning, integrating the chemical,
materials and engineering aspects of catalysis in examples taken
directly from industry.Aimed at master's and PhD students with a
limited background in chemistry, this book provides a thorough
introduction to the principles behind catalysis that will enable
readers to understand the concepts and analyse the literature
necessary for its study.
The transformative impacts of digitalization on society are visible
both within nation states and across borders. Information and
communication technologies are typically considered beneficial for
democracy. Nevertheless, this book explores the challenges that
technology brings to democracy, and in so doing advances our
understanding of this crucial digital, social and political
phenomenon. It contributes to the broader discussion of the
relationship between international, national and sub-national
norms, institutions and actors in an increasingly connected world.
Insightful and current, this book offers a wide variety of
perspectives in an area where there is still not yet an extensive
body of research. It considers, for example: the extent to which
new forms of digital political engagement change traditional
democratic decision-making; how receptive national governments and
authorities are to digital democratic movements; how governments
can uphold the values of democratic society while also ensuring
flexibility with regard to the private sector; and how we should
judge these developments in light of the cross-border effects of
digitalization. Understanding the influence of digitalization on
democracy is crucial. As such, this book will appeal to a broad
audience including, but not limited to, social scientists, policy
makers, legal researchers, NGOs, governments, students and lawyers.
Contributors include: M. Adams, A. Banerjee, E. Bayamlioglu, C.L.
Blake, J. Cudmore, C. Cuijpers, A. Dumas, C.R. Farina, M.-J. Garot,
T. Gylfason, H.L. Kong, E.A. Lazzari, P.L. Lindseth, N. Luka, A.
Meuwese, L.F.M. Moncau, C. Nam, M. Newhart, U. Pagallo, I. Pernice,
C. Prins, R. Radu, M.S.G. Rosina, R. Weill, K. van Aeken, B. Zhao,
N. Zingales
In 1967, Justice John Marshall Harlan introduced the litmus test of
'a reasonable expectation of privacy' in his concurring opinion in
the US Supreme Court case of Katz v. United States. Privacy,
regulations to protect privacy, and data protection have been legal
and social issues in many Western countries for a number of
decades. However, recent measures to combat terrorism, to fight
crime, and to increase security, together with the growing social
acceptance of privacy-invasive technologies can be considered a
serious threat to the fundamental right to privacy. What is the
purport of 'reasonable expectations of privacy'? Reasonable
expectations of privacy and the reality of data protection is the
title of a research project being carried out by TILT, the Tilburg
Institute for Law, Technology, and Society at Tilburg University,
The Netherlands. The project is aimed at developing an
international research network of privacy experts (professionals,
academics, policymakers) and to carry out research on the practice,
meaning, and legal performance of privacy and data protection in an
international perspective. Part of the research project was to
analyse the concept of privacy and the reality of data protection
in case law, with video surveillance and workplace privacy as two
focal points. The eleven country reports regarding case law on
video surveillance and workplace privacy are the core of the
present book. The conclusions drawn by the editors are intended to
trigger and stimulate an international debate on the use and
possible drawbacks of the 'reasonable expectations of privacy'
concept. The editors are all affiliated to TILT - Tilburg Institute
for Law, Technology, and Society, Tilburg University, The
Netherlands. This is Volume 7 in the Information Technology and Law
(IT&Law) Series
The central topics here are: institutional reforms to regulate
markets; innovations in the system of national accounts and
cartelization of markets; the use of the internet for public choice
and administrative accountability; and an innovative voucher scheme
for social policy.
"Aloys Prinz" is professor of economics at the University of
Mnster (Germany). "Albert E. Steenge" is professor at the School of
Business, Public Administration and Technology at the University of
Twente (the Netherlands). "Jrg Schmidt" is researcher at the
University of Mnster.
Electronic commerce is here to stay. No matter how big the dot-com
crisis was or how far the e-entrepreneurs' shares fell in the
market, the fact remains that there is still confidence in
electronic trading. At least it would appear that investors are
confident in e-companies again. However, not only trust of venture
capitalists is of importance--consumers also have to have faith in
on-line business. After all, without consumers there is no
e-business. Interacting lawyers, technicians and economists are
needed to create a trustworthy electronic commerce environment. To
achieve this environment, thorough and inter-disciplinary research
is required and that is exactly what this book is about.
Researchers of the project Enabling Electronic Commerce from the
Dutch universities of Tilburg and Eindhoven have chosen a number of
e-topics to elaborate on trust from their point of view. This
volume makes clear that the various disciplines can and will play a
role in developing conditions for trust and thus contribute to a
successful electronic market.
The International Federation of Library Associations and
Institutions (IFLA) is the leading international body representing
the interests of library and information services and their users.
It is the global voice of the information profession. The series
IFLA Publications deals with many of the means through which
libraries, information centres, and information professionals
worldwide can formulate their goals, exert their influence as a
group, protect their interests, and find solutions to global
problems.
Governments across the world have recognised the potential of new
information and communication technologies (ICTs) to bring about
fundamental renewal in not only government and public sector
processes, but also their relationship with civil societal groups,
the private sector, citizens, and various other actors. ICT
provides enormous opportunities to increase efficiency and
effectiveness in all kinds of policy sectors, and promises a real
dialogue between policy makers and the public. This second edition
of the prescient and influential work first published in 2001
includes updated texts of several chapters from the earlier edition
as well as various chapters, among them a number of country reports
written for the e-government session of the of the 17th World
Congress of Comparative Law. In addition to visions of the concept
of electronic government, it provides examples of already active
electronic governance by including various chapters on developments
in the United States (both federal and state), the United Kingdom,
Canada, Germany, Italy, Denmark, and the Netherlands. It draws
valuable lessons (cross-national, between policy sectors and across
administrations) from the design of electronic government and from
evaluations of electronic government in practice. Aspects of
e-government covered in the second edition include the following:
government initiatives such as e-publication, online filing
(including e-procurement and courts e-filing); 'e-democracy'
features such as e-voting, e-participation, e-consultation and
e-petitioning; benefits of government use of such expanding
technologies as global positioning systems, smartcards, and
biometrics; benefits to citizens services such as social security
and services in the health care sector; applications to the
judicial system and law enforcement; differences between
developments and policy initiatives in various countries; and,
obstacles and dilemmas touching upon security, surveillance,
identity fraud, liability, intellectual property, free access,
national security, equality, and privacy. Especially in its close
attention to the interaction between legal, practical, public
administration and ethical obstacles and dilemmas, "Designing E-
Government, Second Edition" is of enormous value to practitioners,
officials, and policymakers concerned with the legal implications
related to the design and implementation of e-government, and with
the present and future challenges of this endeavour.
This volume of Advances in Clinical Child Psychology is the third
under our editorship and the seventeenth of the series. It
continues the tradition of examining a broad range of topics and
issues related to the study and treatment of child and adolescent
behavior problems. Over the years, the series has served to
identify important and exciting new developments in the field and
provide scholarly review of current thought and practices. In the
openingchapter, Cichetti, Toth, and Lynch examine attachment theory
and its implications for psychopathology. They provide exacting
commentary on the status of the construct of attachment and its
potential role in the development of diverse psychopathologies.
Similarly, Richards explores the impact of infant cognitive
psychophysiology and its role in normal and abnormal development in
the second chapter. Both of these chapters address issues of risk
for subsequent psychopathology and are deeply embedded in
developmental theory. In Chapter 3/ Nottelmann and Jensen tackle
the important issue of comorbidity in psychiatric diagnosis from a
developmental perspective.
Many industrialized countries are facing large problems with their
public pension systems in the 21st century. An unfavourable age
distribution, with lower population shares in working ages and
increasing shares and numbers of elderly persons in the future will
lead, under current pension systems, to a drop in contributions and
at the same time to sharply rising amounts of benefits paid. This
book analyzes the impact of dynamics in age structure and marital
status composition on future public pension expenditures in twelve
industrialized countries. It shows that there is no demographic
response to population ageing at the horizon 2030. Neither an
increase in fertility nor an inflow of migrants can rejuvenate
national populations, unless fertility and/or migration reach
unrealistically high levels. Therefore, the overall conclusion of
this book is that demographic variables are of limited help to
relieve the burden of future public pension expenditures.
Substantial reductions of the public pension burden have to be
sought in socioeconomic measures, and not in adjusting demographic
conditions. The book includes various demographic and pension
scenarios for pension costs in the coming decades for Austria,
Canada, the Czech and Slovak Republics, Finland, France, Germany,
Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, and Sweden. Not
only old age pensions, but also disability and survivor pensions
have been investigated. Variant projections were calculated for
changes in demographic, labour force, and pension system variables.
In addition, separate case studies for three countries deal with: a
pension system in Austria in which benefits depend on the number
children ever born; the impact of household dynamics on social
security in the Netherlands, not just marriage and marriage
dissolution; and with the consequences of economic growth for
public pensions in Sweden.
This is the first volume to explore the reception of the
Pythagorean doctrine of cosmic harmony within a variety of
contexts, ranging chronologically from Plato to 18th-century
England. This original collection of essays engages with
contemporary debates concerning the relationship between music,
philosophy, and science, and challenges the view that Renaissance
discussions on cosmic harmony are either mere repetitions of
ancient music theory or pre-figurations of the 'Scientific
Revolution'. Utilizing this interdisciplinary approach, Renaissance
Conceptions of Cosmic Harmony offers a new perspective on the
reception of an important classical theme in various cultural,
sequential and geographical contexts, underlying the continuities
and changes between Antiquity, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
This project will be of particular interest within these emerging
disciplines as they continue to explore the ideological
significance of the various ways in which we appropriate the past.
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ECSCW 2001 (Hardcover, 2001 ed.)
Wolfgang Prinz, Matthias Jarke, Yvonne Rogers, K. Schmidt, Volker Wulf
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R3,124
Discovery Miles 31 240
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Schmidt and Bannon (1992) introduced the concept of common
information space by contrasting it with technical conceptions of
shared information: Cooperative work is not facilitated simply by
the provisioning of a shared database, but rather requires the
active construction by the participants of a common information
space where the meanings of the shared objects are debated and
resolved, at least locally and temporarily. (Schmidt and Bannon, p.
22) A CIS, then, encompasses not only the information but also the
practices by which actors establish its meaning for their
collective work. These negotiated understandings of the information
are as important as the availability of the information itself: The
actors must attempt to jointly construct a common information space
which goes beyond their individual personal information spaces. . .
. The common information space is negotiated and established by the
actors involved. (Schmidt and Bannon, p. 28) This is not to suggest
that actors' understandings of the information are identical; they
are simply "common" enough to coordinate the work. People
understand how the information is relevant for their own work.
Therefore, individuals engaged in different activities will have
different perspectives on the same information. The work of
maintaining the common information space is the work that it takes
to balance and accommodate these different perspectives. A "bug"
report in software development is a simple example. Software
developers and quality assurance personnel have access to the same
bug report information. However, access to information is not
sufficient to coordinate their work.
Neuronal phase response curves (PRCs) summarize the relationship
between the timing of inputs within a neuron's spike cycle and the
consequent shifts in output spike timing. The form of a neuron's
PRC reflects its mechanism of spike initiation or excitability as
well as other influences of membrane conductances on synaptic
integration. PRCs are efficient encapsulations of the input-output
processing of individual neurons to single perturbations and are
powerful devices for the prediction and interpretation of patterned
neuronal network activity including synchronization phenomena in
connected networks or populations receiving shared input. Thus,
application of phase response analysis to neural systems targets
the interface of neural computation at the cellular and network
levels, one of the most critical and expansive gaps in our
understanding of the brain. This volume surveys the diversity of
applications of phase response analysis by many of the prominent
theoreticians and experimentalists in the Computational
Neurosciences. Readers will find a thorough introduction to the
foundational concepts underlying phase response analysis, advanced
techniques for accurate estimation of neuronal PRCs, and impactful
illustrations of both the cellular underpinnings of the phase
response properties of neurons and the power of phase response
analysis to explain network behavior. Throughout the book, the
authors use phase response analysis to elucidate a number of neural
systems that are current foci of exciting research in the
Computational Neurosciences and are at the forefront of our
advancing grasp of the complex mechanisms of brain function and
dysfunction.
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