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Rethinking a Sustainable Society Alan Mayne The world has already
passed the midway point for achieving by 2015 the eight Millennium
Development Goals for a "more peaceful, prosperous and just world"
that were set by the United Nations in the wake of its
inspirational Millennium Dec- 1 laration in 2000. These goals range
from combating poverty, hunger, and disease, to empowering women,
and ensuring environmental sustainability. However Ban Ki-Moon, the
United Nations Secretary-General, conceded in 2007 that progress to
date has been mixed. During 2008 the head of the United Nations
World Food P- gramme cautioned that because of the surge in world
commodity prices the program had insuf?cient money to stave off
global malnutrition, and the World Health Or- nization warned of a
global crisis in water and sanitation. Depressing news accounts
accumulate about opportunities missed to achieve a fairer world
order and ecolo- calsustainability:
themanipulationofelectionresultsinAfrica, humanrightsabuses in
China, 4000 Americans dead and another nation torn apart by a
senseless and protracted war in Iraq, and weasel words by the
world's political leadership in the lead-up to negotiations for a
climate change deal in 2009 that is supposed to stabilize global
carbon dioxide emissions. It is clear that the parameters of the
debates that drive progressive policy change urgently require
repositioning and energizing. As is shown by the contributors to
Rethinking work and learning, experts in the humanities and social
sciences (HASS) couldhaveanimportantroletoplayinthisprocess.
Originally published in 1986. All students of social science
must confront a number of important philosophical issues. This
introduction to the philosophy of the social sciences provides
coherent answers to questions about empiricism, explanation and
rationality. It evaluates contemporary writings on the subject
which can be as difficult as they are important to understand. Each
chapter has an annotated bibliography to enable students to pursue
the issues raised and to assess for themselves the arguments of the
authors.
Originally published in 1986. All students of social science must
confront a number of important philosophical issues. This
introduction to the philosophy of the social sciences provides
coherent answers to questions about empiricism, explanation and
rationality. It evaluates contemporary writings on the subject
which can be as difficult as they are important to understand. Each
chapter has an annotated bibliography to enable students to pursue
the issues raised and to assess for themselves the arguments of the
authors.
The term "zooplankton" describes the community of floating, often
microscopic, animals that inhabit aquatic environments. Being near
the base of the food chain, they serve as food for larger animals,
such as fish.
The ICES (International Council for the Exploration of the Sea)
Zooplankton Methodology Manual provides comprehensive coverage of
modern techniques in zooplankton ecology written by a group of
international experts. Chapters include sampling, acoustic and
optical methods, estimation of feeding, growth, reproduction and
metabolism, and up-to-date treatment of population genetics and
modeling. This book will be a key reference work for marine
scientists throughout the world.
Key features
* Sampling and experimental design
* Collecting zooplankton
* Techniques for assessing biomass and abundance
* Protozooplankton enumeration and biomass estimation
* New optical and acoustic techniques for estimating zooplankton
biomass and abundance
* Methods for measuring zooplankton feeding, growth, reproduction
and metabolism
* Population genetic analysis of zooplankton
* Modelling zooplankton dynamics
This unique and comprehensive reference work will be essential
reading for marine and freshwater research scientists and graduates
entering the field.
Rethinking a Sustainable Society Alan Mayne The world has already
passed the midway point for achieving by 2015 the eight Millennium
Development Goals for a "more peaceful, prosperous and just world"
that were set by the United Nations in the wake of its
inspirational Millennium Dec- 1 laration in 2000. These goals range
from combating poverty, hunger, and disease, to empowering women,
and ensuring environmental sustainability. However Ban Ki-Moon, the
United Nations Secretary-General, conceded in 2007 that progress to
date has been mixed. During 2008 the head of the United Nations
World Food P- gramme cautioned that because of the surge in world
commodity prices the program had insuf?cient money to stave off
global malnutrition, and the World Health Or- nization warned of a
global crisis in water and sanitation. Depressing news accounts
accumulate about opportunities missed to achieve a fairer world
order and ecolo- calsustainability:
themanipulationofelectionresultsinAfrica, humanrightsabuses in
China, 4000 Americans dead and another nation torn apart by a
senseless and protracted war in Iraq, and weasel words by the
world's political leadership in the lead-up to negotiations for a
climate change deal in 2009 that is supposed to stabilize global
carbon dioxide emissions. It is clear that the parameters of the
debates that drive progressive policy change urgently require
repositioning and energizing. As is shown by the contributors to
Rethinking work and learning, experts in the humanities and social
sciences (HASS) couldhaveanimportantroletoplayinthisprocess.
Information and communication technologies have long promised to
provide quality education, improve healthcare, allow open
government, and solve environmental issues. To realize this
potential and influence policy-making and programme design, the
Singapore Internet Research Center, supported by the IDRC, created
an innovative research capacity-building programme, SIRCA.
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