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This book shows how critical theory can help school leaders and
administrators to prepare students for the ever-changing political,
cultural, economic, and societal conditions of the world. The
contributors use ideas from critical theorists including Adorno,
Fromm, Marcuse and Habermas and connect them with contemporary
theories and debates in educational leadership from moral education
to critical theories on race, to culturally relevant practice. The
book challenges the misconceptions of many present-day educators
about the analytical lens offered by the Frankfurt School theorists
which is often dismissed by policymakers and practitioners. Written
by leading scholars based in the UK, USA, and Canada, the
contributors emphasize and explain the importance of educational
aesthetics, dialectics, education and civilization, the structural
transformation of education’s place in the public sphere, and
education as revolution and enlightenment.
This is the story of how a young high school student, through a
quirk of fate, begins walking down a path that leads him to become
a rural family doctor in Montana. Having served a close-knit
community for fifty years Dr. Robert Whiting recounts a story of a
diphtheria outbreak, some interesting cancer outcomes, and several
cases requiring difficult decision making. In this personal
account, you'll learn what the medical textbooks can't teach you:
How changes in medicine have directly affected practitioners The
bond a small-town doctor forges with his community Creative ways to
dealing with ailments The effects of malpractice charges on the
profession And much more You'll also follow Dr. Whiting-a
sportsman, musician, and a husband-outside the profession. Somehow,
he manages all those roles as he successfully carries out his
practice. Take a closer look into just how he did it, and learn how
changes in medicine have affected practitioners in From the Bedside
to the HMO: A Doctor's Journey.
'Lay on, Lay on-they fail'-the Bruce's victory at Stirling
The Battle of Bannockburn holds a significant place in the history
of Scotland and the Scottish people. Fought in 1314, when Edward II
reigned in England, it was by no means the first clash of arms to
decide the sovereignty of Scotland, nor was it the last-that was
the battle of Culloden Moor in 1745. Bannockburn remains iconic
because it was the most significant Scottish victory in the First
War of Scottish Independence and because it involved a Scottish
army under the command of the heroic figure of Robert the Bruce.
The English, led by their king, marched north to relieve Stirling
Castle which was under attack by Scots commanded by Edward Bruce
the Scottish king's younger brother. The battle need not have been
fought because Bruce had agreed a definition of 'relief' with
Mowbray, the British commander holding the castle, based on the
proximity of the English Army. However, the 'die was cast' and
battle duly joined. This was a poor decision by the English monarch
who had substantially lost command of his battle host. The outcome
of the battle was a crushing defeat for the English and Edward,
with his bodyguard, fled for his life. This special Leonaur edition
contains two contrasting accounts of the battle together with
significant biographical information about the principal
protagonists.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
The Moral Case for Profit Maximization argues that profit
maximization is moral when businessmen seek to maximize profit by
creating goods or services that are of objective value.
Traditionally, profit maximization has been defended on economic
grounds. Profit, economists argue, incentivizes businessmen to
produce goods and services. In this view, businessmen do not need
to be virtuous as long as they deliver the goods. It challenges the
traditional defense of profit maximization, arguing that profit
maximization is morally ambitious because it requires businessmen
to form normative abstractions and to cultivate a virtuous
character. In so doing, the author also challenges the moral basis
of corporate social responsibility. Proponents of CSR argue that
businessmen can do good while doing well. This book argues that
businessmen already do good by maximizing profit, drawing upon the
histories of the wheel, the refrigerator, and the shipping
container, as well as the biographies of J. P. Morgan, John D.
Rockefeller, and Thomas Edison to demonstrate the role of values in
the creation of material goods and the role of the virtues in value
creation. The author challenges readers to rethink the relationship
between profit, value, and virtue.
This book is intended to serve as an up-to-date reference source
for those familiar with chromatography/Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy (FT-IR) methods and as an introduction to techniques
and applications for those interested in future uses for
chromatography/FT-IR.
In a world where natural disasters are increasingly impacting our
lives, this insightful book brings together a variety of voices to
discuss how we can respond practically and faithfully to such
tragedies. Consciously making room for the perspectives of
survivors, responders, and academics, it provides a multi-layered
and compassionate examination of a difficult and often
underexplored subject. As we try to make sense of a seemingly
chaotic world that features earthquakes, tsunamis, and pandemics,
readers will find this unique conversation a truly ispiring
resource for thought, prayer, and action.
The Supreme Court decision that property owners may be entitled to
compensation for government regulations that deprive them of
reasonable use of their property has thrown the land-use field into
a state of turmoil. Will municipal land-use ordinances be found
excessive? What regulations can be considered a reasonable exercise
of police power for public health, safety, and welfare? Will
municipalities be liable for compensation to property owners if
development is restricted? How can municipalities and developers
plan in the wake of this decision? Ordinance provisions cover
components of subdivision regulation: general provisions,
definitions, administration, procedure, design and improvements,
off-tract improvements, and documents to be submitted. "The
Subdivision and Site Plan Handbook" provides a narrative on the
background, rationale, and intent of each requirement accompanying
the model ordinance; gives an overview of the history of
subdivision regulation in the United States; traces the evolution
of land-use regulation through various stages; and presents the
legal context for present-day regulation. The book has been
designed for use by government administrators, developers,
planners, attorneys, and others interested in land-use regulation.
The model ordinance represents the most current thinking about land
use and site control and responds to questions raised by the
Supreme Court decision. David Listokin and Carole Walker's analyses
are flexible, efficient, responsive to local conditions, and
balance regulatory costs and benefits. This is a definitive and
invaluable resource
The Supreme Court decision that property owners may be entitled to
compensation for government regulations that deprive them of
reasonable use of their property has thrown the land-use field into
a state of turmoil. Will municipal land-use ordinances be found
excessive? What regulations can be considered a reasonable exercise
of police power for public health, safety, and welfare? Will
municipalities be liable for compensation to property owners if
development is restricted? How can municipalities and developers
plan in the wake of this decision?Ordinance provisions cover
components of subdivision regulation: general provisions,
definitions, administration, procedure, design and improvements,
off-tract improvements, and documents to be submitted. The
Subdivision and Site Plan Handbookprovides a narrative on the
background, rationale, and intent of each requirement accompanying
the model ordinance; gives an overview of the history of
subdivision regulation in the United States; traces the evolution
of land-use regulation through various stages; and presents the
legal context for present-day regulation.The book has been designed
for use by government administrators, developers, planners,
attorneys, and others interested in land-use regulation. The model
ordinance represents the most current thinking about land use and
site control and responds to questions raised by the Supreme Court
decision. David Listokin and Carole Walker's analyses are flexible,
efficient, responsive to local conditions, and balance regulatory
costs and benefits. This is a definitive and invaluable resource!
Large companies and small are increasingly seeing outsourcing as a
means of making the most of their more limited resources. But how
do you know whether it is right for your organization? What
benefits are on offer and how do you ensure you realize them? How
do you begin to construct a value-for-money agreement or determine
a basis for pricing? What are the risks, and how do you recognize
and manage them? Because every organization's needs are different,
informed answers to these questions have been difficult to come by.
Robert White and Barry James are experts with more than 35 years of
experience in this field. The Outsourcing Manual is a fully
comprehensive guide for any organization considering taking this
route. It is above all practical, with models, outline procedures,
a step-by-step guide to procurement, and standard documentation
that can easily be adapted to your organization's requirements.
There are case studies and worked examples throughout. The four
part structure takes you through: assessment of outsourcing as a
strategy for your organization; the planning phase; implementation;
and outsourcing from the supplier's perspective. If you are
involved in or considering outsourcing, the methodical and case
study illustrated approach of The Outsourcing Manual will equip you
to manage the process for a successful outcome.
Tokyo Junkie is a memoir that plays out over the dramatic 60-year
growth of the megacity Tokyo, once a dark, fetid backwater and now
the most populous, sophisticated, and safe urban capital in the
world. Follow author Robert Whiting (The Chrysanthemum and the Bat,
You Gotta Have Wa, Tokyo Underworld) as he watches Tokyo transform
during the 1964 Olympics, rubs shoulders with the Yakuza and comes
face to face with the city’s dark underbelly, interviews
Japan’s baseball elite after publishing his first best-selling
book on the subject, and learns how politics and sports collide to
produce a cultural landscape unlike any other, even as a new
Olympics is postponed and the COVID virus ravages the nation. A
colorful social history of what Anthony Bourdain dubbed, “the
greatest city in the world,” Tokyo Junkie is a revealing account
by an accomplished journalist who witnessed it all firsthand and,
in the process, had his own dramatic personal transformation.
This book is intended to serve as an up-to-date reference source
for those familiar with chromatography/Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy (FT-IR) methods and as an introduction to techniques
and applications for those interested in future uses for
chromatography/FT-IR.
The best leaders lead by example, not by mandate. However, so much
leadership has become conscripted by neoliberal values. Educators
and politicians, who are increasingly making policy for educators,
have come to believe that standardized test scores are the same as
knowledge acquired, as if test scores actually measure knowledge as
opposed to information. Simply put, educational policy is no longer
being developed for educational purposes but education is
increasingly being manipulated as an experiment in social
engineering. Educational leaders are caught on the horns of a
dilemma - to follow and inscribe policies they do not agree with or
to "go rogue" and do what they know is needed. Leading under
Pressure is aptly titled, as there is significant pressure being
placed on school leaders at any stage in their careers. However, in
an otherwise increasingly hostile political, commercial and natural
environment, there are some rays of hope. For example, teachers
still know what it is that their students need and strive to
provide that, despite mandates that try to create consumers of us
all. This volume is divided into three sections, the first of which
seeks to explore social contexts of educational leadership. The
second section explores the experiences of a variety of educational
leaders in various contexts, while the third section of this volume
looks at some of the consequences, unintended and otherwise, of the
neoliberal commodification of education.
Bob White, a geophysicist, tackles one of the biggest conundrums
in Christian thinking. He combines a profound knowledge of the
science behind natural processes with thorough research into their
impact, and underpins it with a carefully reasoned theological
response.
Examining each type of disaster in turn, he illuminates the way
in which human factors almost always turn natural processes,
without which the earth would be sterile and uninhabitable, into
disasters: population growth, widespread inequality, foolish
farming and building practices, and climate change all contribute,
exacerbating heat waves, famines, and droughts.
He then outlines the insights that Jacob, Job, and Jesus offer.
This highly readable book is permeated with engaging insights into
the human condition and the biblical response.
Large companies and small are increasingly seeing outsourcing as a
means of making the most of their more limited resources. But how
do you know whether it is right for your organization? What
benefits are on offer and how do you ensure you realize them? How
do you begin to construct a value-for-money agreement or determine
a basis for pricing? What are the risks, and how do you recognize
and manage them? Because every organization's needs are different,
informed answers to these questions have been difficult to come by.
Robert White and Barry James are experts with more than 35 years of
experience in this field. The Outsourcing Manual is a fully
comprehensive guide for any organization considering taking this
route. It is above all practical, with models, outline procedures,
a step-by-step guide to procurement, and standard documentation
that can easily be adapted to your organization's requirements.
There are case studies and worked examples throughout. The four
part structure takes you through: assessment of outsourcing as a
strategy for your organization; the planning phase; implementation;
and outsourcing from the supplier's perspective. If you are
involved in or considering outsourcing, the methodical and case
study illustrated approach of The Outsourcing Manual will equip you
to manage the process for a successful outcome.
Healthy Soils for Healthy Vines provides a clear understanding of
vineyard soils and how to manage and improve soil health for best
vineyard performance. It covers the inherent and dynamic properties
of soil health, how to choose which soil properties to monitor, how
to monitor soil and vine performance, and how vineyard management
practices affect soil health, fruit composition and wine sensory
characters. It also covers the basic tenets of sustainable
winegrowing and their significance for business resilience in the
face of a changing climate. This book will be of practical value to
anyone growing grapevines, managing a vineyard or making wine, from
the small individual grower to the large wine company employee. It
will be of special interest to winegrowers employing organic,
natural, or biodynamic methods of production, where the primary
focus is on the biological health of the soil.
Beginning Scribus is the book you wish you'd read when you
downloaded Scribus for the first time. Scribus is an award-winning
page-layout program used by newspaper designers, magazine designers
and those who want to do proper page layout but not pay for an
expensive solution. It is free and Open Source, providing a useful
alternative for those who cannot afford or choose not to use Adobe
InDesign or QuarkXpress. Beginning Scribus provides you with the
skills you will need in order to use this program productively. It
demonstrates the techniques used by printers and publishers in
order to create a range of layouts and effects, and it shows you
how you can use these techniques to design everything from a flyer
to a three-fold brochure. Using the latest Scribus release,
Beginning Scribus takes you through the process of designing a
magazine from start to finish and teaches you some of the tricks of
professional page layout and design. The book also provides a
definitive guide to desktop publishing using free, open source
tools, such as GIMP for photo manipulation.
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