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Over the last 25 years there has been a considerable increase in
the awareness of quality related issues. In the world of business
and commerce, this awareness has manifested itself in the
development of what was the British Quality Standard BS 5750 into
what is now the international standard BS EN ISO 9000. Alongside
all of this, consumers in general have developed increasingly
demanding expectations with regard to the quality of goods and
services available in the market place. During a similar period
there has also been an increase in legislation, together with an
expansion of the common law, which has strengthened the protection
already afforded to the consumer.
This book will provide quality practitioners, managers and those
with a general interest in quality, with an insight into the legal
issues involved. In addition, the book shows how the implementation
of a Quality Assurance Management System - such as that required in
order to be registered as a firm of assessed capability, in
accordance with BS EN ISO 9000 - can act as an aid to businesses
seeking to comply with their legal obligations.
In addition, for those following a formal course of study, the
contents will prove to be particularly useful to students
undertaking the Institute of Quality Assurance's Associate
Membership examination: Principles and Techniques of Quality
Assurance.
For researchers in the Learning Sciences, there is a lack of
literature on current design practices and its many obstacles.
Design as Scholarship in the Learning Sciences is an informative
resource that addresses this need by providing, through a robust
collection of case studies, instructive reference points and
important principles for more successful projects. Drawing from the
reflections of diverse practitioners, this text includes response
sections that guide readers in understanding the research in the
context of their own work. It touches upon educational
technologies, community co-design, and more, and is grounded in the
critical analysis of experts seeking to grow the community.
For researchers in the Learning Sciences, there is a lack of
literature on current design practices and its many obstacles.
Design as Scholarship in the Learning Sciences is an informative
resource that addresses this need by providing, through a robust
collection of case studies, instructive reference points and
important principles for more successful projects. Drawing from the
reflections of diverse practitioners, this text includes response
sections that guide readers in understanding the research in the
context of their own work. It touches upon educational
technologies, community co-design, and more, and is grounded in the
critical analysis of experts seeking to grow the community.
Over the last 25 years there has been a considerable increase in
the awareness of quality related issues. In the world of business
and commerce, this awareness has manifested itself in the
development of what was the British Quality Standard BS 5750 into
what is now the international standard BS EN ISO 9000. Alongside
all of this, consumers in general have developed increasingly
demanding expectations with regard to the quality of goods and
services available in the market place. During a similar period
there has also been an increase in legislation, together with an
expansion of the common law, which has strengthened the protection
already afforded to the consumer. This book will provide quality
practitioners, managers and those with a general interest in
quality, with an insight into the legal issues involved. In
addition, the book shows how the implementation of a Quality
Assurance Management System - such as that required in order to be
registered as a firm of assessed capability, in accordance with BS
EN ISO 9000 - can act as an aid to businesses seeking to comply
with their legal obligations.In addition, for those following a
formal course of study, the contents will prove to be particularly
useful to students undertaking the Institute of Quality Assurance's
Associate Membership examination: Principles and Techniques of
Quality Assurance.
Born in colonial New Zealand, Ernest Rutherford grew up on the
frontier a different world from Cambridge, to which he won a
scholarship at the age of twenty-four. His work revolutionized
modern physics. Among his discoveries were the orbital structure of
the atom and the concept of the "half-life" of radioactive
materials. Rutherford and the young men working under him were the
first to split the atom, unlocking tremendous forces forces, as
Rutherford himself predicted, that would bring us the atomic bomb.
In Richard Reeves's hands, Rutherford comes alive, a ruddy, genial
man and a pivotal figure in scientific history.
The fully revised new edition of the international bestseller THE
80 MINUTE MBA is your short-cut to business brilliance. A
traditional MBA is for either the time-rich, very wealthy or lucky
few with a generous corporate sponsor. So what happens if you want
to get a hit of high-quality business inspiration without spending
two years back at school? THE 80 MINUTE MBA is the gateway to fresh
thinking, in less time than it takes a standard meeting to get past
coffee and donuts. The MBA-in-a-box book is old hat. Managers need
the encouragement to think differently, not in the same straight
lines. THE 80 MINUTE MBA is an injection of inspiration, creative
thinking and dynamic approaches which will help you see the world
of business differently. Stimulating new material brings this
edition right up to date with critical business thinking. Including
a new chapter on the platform economy and fresh technology and
social media examples this book will energize and inspire you in
equal measure.
Happy Mondays presents a groundbreaking challenge to anti-work
rhetoric. It argues that work need not be stressful, demolishes the
arguments for "work-life balance," and shows you how to approach
work not merely as an economic necessity but as something that will
enhance your life.
Much sought after by oil companies, ‘generation kitchens’ are
sites where geological forces have combined to create conditions
for oil production. By turns brooding and wittily observant,
Richard Reeve’s fifth book of poetry meditates on the intrigues
of fossil fuel companies and ecological despoliation, but also on
personal rites of passage – on relationships, deaths, the turn of
the seasons. Oracular and bardic, Reeve’s work is also
paradoxically down to earth and gritty. He knows that, beyond the
geopolitical framework, beyond the anthropocene moment, the
landscape endures.
In the early hours of June 26, 1948, phones began ringing across
America, waking up the airmen of World War II--pilots, navigators,
and mechanics--who were finally beginning normal lives with new
houses, new jobs, new wives, and new babies. Some were given just
forty-eight hours to report to local military bases. The president,
Harry S. Truman, was recalling them to active duty to try to save
the desperate people of the western sectors of Berlin, the enemy
capital many of them had bombed to rubble only three years before.
Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin had ordered a blockade of the city,
isolating the people of West Berlin, using hundreds of thousands of
Red Army soldiers to close off all land and water access to the
city. He was gambling that he could drive out the small detachments
of American, British, and French occupation troops, because their
only option was to stay and watch Berliners starve--or retaliate by
starting World War III. The situation was impossible, Truman was
told by his national security advisers, including the Joint Chiefs
of Staff. His answer: "We stay in Berlin. Period." That was when
the phones started ringing and local police began banging on doors
to deliver telegrams to the vets.
Drawing on service records and hundreds of interviews in the United
States, Germany, and Great Britain, Reeves tells the stories of
these civilian airmen, the successors to Stephen Ambrose's "Citizen
Soldiers," ordinary Americans again called to extraordinary tasks.
They did the impossible, living in barns and muddy tents, flying
over Soviet-occupied territory day and night, trying to stay awake,
making it up as they went along and ignoring Russian fighters and
occasional anti-aircraft fire trying to drive them to hostile
ground.
The Berlin Airlift changed the world. It ended when Stalin backed
down and lifted the blockade, but only after the bravery and sense
of duty of those young heroes had bought the Allies enough time to
create a new West Germany and sign the mutual defense agreement
that created NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
And then they went home again. Some of them forgot where they had
parked their cars after they got the call.
Using the techniques he employed in his highly original bestselling
books on Presidents Kennedy and Nixon, Reeves takes us inside
Reagan's Oval Office to show us this president moving easily into
his role, finding the words and acts to move his very focused
agenda: regain military superiority, roll back taxes, diminish the
government, restore American pride and destroy communism. Reagan
imagined a different world and had the right words, the personal
optimism and unshakable will to make it happen. At home he drove
enduring wedges into the body politic by turning political
questions into moral issues. Abroad he waged unconstitutional
covert wars. The Ronald Reagan we see is a charismatic, crafty,
often deceptive politician. He expanded the power of an office
believed to be in decline. The way Reagan did it - because he
changed the presidency itself, and perhaps the world - will long be
studied. Astonishing in its intimacy, authoritative in its
sourcing, PRESIDENT REAGAN is a portrait of modern presidential
power that will stand as the definitive study of Reagan in the
White House.
This comprehensive reader is the first book dealing with the media and American politics that brings together the perspectives of academics, reporters, commentators, campaign consultants, and policy advocates. The contributions blend together the best social science research on political communication with the expertise of some of this country?s leading journalists and political consultants. Unlike most other treatments, this volume covers the full range of research issues, including the forces that influence the production of news stories, the relationship between reporters and elected officials, the use of the media in political campaigns, the effects of news presentations on public opinion, and the increasing importance of the mass media in the policy process. This thorough book provides coverage of everything from the Gulf War to journalistic code and will be valuable for courses in political communication, public opinion, and related undergraduate courses. NOTES: Edited volume, most pieces not written for this book. Iyengar is a very well known political scientist; Reeves is a tv political commentator/journalist. Contributors are all big names (the usual "all-star lineup"). Book and part introductions provide thorough pedagogy for students. Biggest market in Intro Am. Govt (about 800,000 students take this course each year). Roughly half of these courses use readers like Iyengar in addition to core text.
The power and status of the press in America reached new heights
after spectacular reporting triumphs in the segregated South, in
Vietnam, and in Washington during the Watergate years. Then new
technologies created instantaneous global reporting which left the
government unable to control the flow of information to the nation.
The press thus became a formidable rival in critical struggles to
control what the people know and when they know it. But that was
more power than the press could handle--and journalism crashed
toward new lows in public esteem and public purpose. The dazzling
new technologies, profit-driven owners, and celebrated editors,
reporters, and broadcasters made it possible to bypass older values
and standards of journalism. Journalists reveled in lusty pursuit
after the power of politics, the profits of entertainment and
trespass into privacy. Richard Reeves was there at the rise and at
the fall, beginning as a small-town editor, becoming the chief
political correspondent of the New York Times and then a
best-selling author and award-winning documentary filmmaker. He
tells the story of a tribe that lost its way. From the Pony Express
to the Internet, he chronicles what happened to the press as
America accelerated into uncertainty, arguing that to survive, the
press must go back to doing what it was hired to do long ago: stand
as outsiders watching government and politics on behalf of a free
people busy with their own affairs.
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