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Nick Rezkel lost his PI license in a case that went sideways.
Turned out catching the killer wasn't enough. Now he's on the
Alaska Pipeline, working seven tens out in the minus 70 wind chill.
Yet, there are compensations. Nick finds a new girlfriend with a
quick tongue and a killer body. Life feels sweet despite his boss'
threats to fire him. Then, everything gets serious. He finds a dead
man, a heap of cocaine dissolving in his pooled blood. State
troopers are convinced Nick stabbed the guy. Now, it's up to him to
escape and clear his name
Identity politics is a lightning rod in American society. To both
its progressive supporters and conservative critics, it is seen as
defining the agenda of the Left. Both sides are wrong. Identity
politics is not a leftist project. Instead it enables the
neoliberal political economy that has caused historic levels of
inequality and triggered repression and mass incarceration to deal
with the social wreckage. Identity politics is a form of biological
essentialism, impeding morality built upon universal humanism and
politics built upon solidarity. Unlike the conservative assaults,
this book avoids the trivial and silly pronouncements of identity
politics (a term generally avoided in the work as loaded and
pejorative). It challenges the following key principles of the
Identity, Diversity, and Multiculturalism Program: Diversity as
Justice—the most important struggle for justice today is
increasing the representation throughout society of individuals
from historically marginalized groups by ending discrimination on
the grounds of race, gender, sexual orientation, and similar
characteristics; Colorblindness as Racism—race-neutral solutions
to the problems caused by racism are harmful to blacks; Race as
Culture—members of different races, specifically blacks and
whites in the United States, belong to different cultures; Culture
as Virtue—cultures should be respected and celebrated. This book
forcefully argues that none of these tenets is—or rather should
be—a leftist commitment. For progressives who accept the
principles, it poses a challenge: How do you defend them from a
leftist critique, one that does not deny the continuing
significance of discrimination, rather than from the weaker attacks
of conservatives? For those on the Right, this work represents a
threat. Once leftists return to their core commitments they will
form a powerful movement for political and economic change.
Identity politics is a lightning rod in American society. To both
its progressive supporters and conservative critics, it is seen as
defining the agenda of the Left. Both sides are wrong. Identity
politics is not a leftist project. Instead it enables the
neoliberal political economy that has caused historic levels of
inequality and triggered repression and mass incarceration to deal
with the social wreckage. Identity politics is a form of biological
essentialism, impeding morality built upon universal humanism and
politics built upon solidarity. Unlike the conservative assaults,
this book avoids the trivial and silly pronouncements of identity
politics (a term generally avoided in the work as loaded and
pejorative). It challenges the following key elements of the
Identity, Diversity, and Multiculturalism Program: Diversity as
Justice-the most important struggle for justice today is increasing
the representation throughout society of individuals from
historically marginalized groups by ending discrimination on the
grounds of race, gender, sexual orientation, and similar
characteristics; Colorblindness as Racism-race-neutral solutions to
the problems caused by racism are harmful to blacks; Race as
Culture-members of different races, specifically blacks and whites
in the United States, belong to different cultures; Culture as
Virtue-cultures should be respected and celebrated. This book
forcefully argues that none of these tenets is-or rather should
be-a leftist commitment. For progressives already suspicious of
those principles, this work offers a cogent set of responses to the
unfounded accusations of racism, sexism, and so on that frequently
restrict critical discussion of the topic. For progressives who
accept the principles, it poses a challenge: How do you defend them
from a leftist critique, one that does not deny the continuing
significance of discrimination, rather than from the weaker attacks
of the Right? For those on the Right, it represents a threat. The
liberal focus on identity allows conservatives to define politics
as largely a symbolic project. Once leftists return to their core
commitments they will form a powerful movement for political and
economic change.
This open access textbook introduces the emerging field of
Development Engineering and its constituent theories, methods, and
applications. It is both a teaching text for students and a
resource for researchers and practitioners engaged in the design
and scaling of technologies for low-resource communities. The scope
is broad, ranging from the development of mobile applications for
low-literacy users to hardware and software solutions for providing
electricity and water in remote settings. It is also highly
interdisciplinary, drawing on methods and theory from the social
sciences as well as engineering and the natural sciences. The
opening section reviews the history of "technology-for-development"
research, and presents a framework that formalizes this body of
work and begins its transformation into an academic discipline. It
identifies common challenges in development and explains the book's
iterative approach of "innovation, implementation, evaluation,
adaptation." Each of the next six thematic sections focuses on a
different sector: energy and environment; market performance;
education and labor; water, sanitation and health; digital
governance; and connectivity. These thematic sections contain case
studies from landmark research that directly integrates engineering
innovation with technically rigorous methods from the social
sciences. Each case study describes the design, evaluation, and/or
scaling of a technology in the field and follows a single form,
with common elements and discussion questions, to create continuity
and pedagogical consistency. Together, they highlight successful
solutions to development challenges, while also analyzing the
rarely discussed failures. The book concludes by reiterating the
core principles of development engineering illustrated in the case
studies, highlighting common challenges that engineers and
scientists will face in designing technology interventions that
sustainably accelerate economic development. Development
Engineering provides, for the first time, a coherent intellectual
framework for attacking the challenges of poverty and global
climate change through the design of better technologies. It offers
the rigorous discipline needed to channel the energy of a new
generation of scientists and engineers toward advancing social
justice and improved living conditions in low-resource communities
around the world.
Interrogates the development of the world's first international
courts of humanitarian justice and the subsequent "liberation" of
nearly two hundred thousand Africans in the nineteenth century. In
1807, Britain and the United States passed legislation limiting and
ultimately prohibiting the transoceanic slave trade. As world
powers negotiated anti-slave-trade treaties thereafter, British,
Portuguese, Spanish, Brazilian,French, and US authorities seized
ships suspected of illegal slave trading, raided slave barracoons,
and detained newly landed slaves. The judicial processes in a
network of the world's first international courts of humanitarian
justice not only resulted in the "liberation" of nearly two hundred
thousand people but also generated an extensive archive of
documents. Liberated Africans and the Abolition of the Slave Trade,
1807-1896 makes use of theserecords to illuminate the fates of
former slaves, many of whom were released from bondage only to be
conscripted into extended periods of indentured servitude. Essays
in this collection explore a range of topics relatedto those often
referred to as "Liberated Africans"-a designation that, the authors
show, should be met with skepticism. Contributors share an emphasis
on the human consequences for Africans of the abolitionist
legislation. The collection is deeply comparative, looking at
conditions in British colonies such as Sierra Leone, the Gambia,
and the Cape Colony as well as slave-plantation economies such as
Brazil, Cuba, and Mauritius. A groundbreaking intervention in the
study of slavery, abolition, and emancipation, this volume will be
welcomed by scholars, students, and all who care about the global
legacy of slavery.
In a future when Earth is a toxic, abandoned world and humanity has
spread into the outer solar system to survive, the tightly
controlled use of time travel holds the key to maintaining a
fragile existence among the other planets and their moons. James
Griffin-Mars is a chronman - a convicted criminal recruited for his
unique psychological makeup to undertake the most dangerous job
there is: missions into Earth's past to recover resources and
treasure without altering the timeline. Most chronmen never reach
old age, and James is reaching his breaking point. On his final
mission, James meets scientist Elise Kim, who is fated to die
during the destruction of an oceanic rig. Against his training and
common sense, James brings her back to the future with him, saving
her life, but turning them both into fugitives. Remaining free
means losing themselves in the wild and poisonous wastes of Earth,
and discovering what hope may yet remain for humanity's home world.
File Under: Science Fiction
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