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Every Friday after school, Eugene visits with his grandmother. He
loves to visit Grandma Ellie because he knows that she always has a
listening ear. They talk about every subject that you can imagine;
spiders, astronauts, monster trucks and movies. Today they will
talk about something special; a subject that all of Eugene's
friends has an opinion about. Grandma Ellie will take Eugene on an
adventure that will show him the answer to his question. "Grandma,
What Color is God?" This colorful adventure is told through
illustrations and humorous, energetic text that will appeal to any
child that has ever asked, "What Color is God?" Angela S. Gibson is
an Evangelist and Youth Minister and has been teaching young people
the Love of God for over 25 years. This story was inspired by a
dream that she had and is written to open the dialogue with
children about the differences in races and cultures. She is an
Author and has written plays that are thought provoking and
inspiring, God Can Turn It Around and I Have a Dream. She lives in
Westampton, NJ with her husband and grandson. She is the mother of
3 grown children. This is her first picture book and was written as
a gift to her grandchildren. Denis Proulx is a professional
children's book illustrator. He has a proven track record as a
creative thinker with the ability of working closely with you to
ensure that Your vision is realized. His illustrations are drawn in
a style that has mass appeal with children of all ages. Contact
Denis Proulx @ www.shangrila-studio.com.
This edited volume brings together a series of contributions
exploring the socio-cultural and psychological representation of
peace and conflict. It ventures into areas of the humanities and
social sciences not typically foregrounded in peace studies, such
as psychology, sociology, media studies, cultural studies, history,
and geography.
Since World War II, remarkable progress has been made toward
establishing more effective international laws and organizations to
reduce opportunities for confrontation and conflict, and to enhance
the pursuit of security and well-being. This book offers a detailed
record of that progress, as well as its meaning for our times and
those ahead. Taking a historical, theoretical, and case-study
approach, John Gibson provides the reader with a broad
understanding of how international organizations evolved to serve
the interests of their member states, how the constitutional
charters of organizations provide a coherent statement of goals and
means to goals, and how these organizations are assuming increasing
authority in the international system.
The work traces the progression of international constitutional
and human rights law, with an emphasis on the past 45 years. In the
first part, Gibson discusses the historic processes of political
relations and mutual reliance; the evolution of these patterns
through World War II; the subsequent history of the United Nations;
the prime goals of international constitutional law; and the
organizations' range of authority--from the high state to the
supra-organization level. Part two offers a case study of the
progression of international human rights law. Separate chapters
trace the history of human rights in religion and philosophy and
the role of the state in international law, while the concluding
chapter on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights
demonstrates how organizations actually function. This book will be
a valuable resource for courses in international relations and
international law, as well as an important addition to academic and
professional libraries.
The notion that certain mental or physical events can capture
attention has been one of the most enduring topics in the study of
attention owing to the importance of understanding how
goal-directed and stimulus-driven processes interact in perception
and cognition. Despite the clear theoretical and applied importance
of attentional capture, a broad survey of this field suggests that
the term "capture" means different things to different people. In
some cases, it refers to covert shifts of spatial attention, in
others involuntary saccades, and in still others general disruption
of processing by irrelevant stimuli. The properties that elicit
"capture" can also range from abruptly onset or moving lights, to
discontinuities in textures, to unexpected tones, to emotionally
valenced words or pictures, to directional signs and symbols.
Attentional capture has been explored in both the spatial and
temporal domains as well as the visual and auditory modalities.
There are also a number of different theoretical perspectives on
the mechanisms underlying "capture" (both functional and
neurophysiological) and the level of cognitive control over
capture. This special issue provides a sampling of the diversity of
approaches, domains, and theoretical perspectives that currently
exist in the study of attentional capture. Together, these
contributions should help evaluate the degree to which attentional
capture represents a unitary construct that reflects fundamental
theoretical principles and mechanisms of the mind.
Gore Vidal has been entertaining, and occasionally outraging, the
American public for fifty years. In the course of his long career,
Vidal has set new intellectual and artistic standards for American
historical fiction and has also established himself in the first
rank of contemporary social satirists. This is the first
full-length study to include Vidal's most recent novels and the
first designed to meet the needs of the general reader as well as
students of contemporary literature. It includes discussions of
Lincoln, Empire, Hollywood, and Live from Golgotha, as well as his
earlier novels. Baker and Gibson show that while Vidal's novels are
tremendously entertaining, they are also serious examinations of a
recurring theme—the decline of the West in general and the
decline of the United States in particular. A biographical sketch
of the writer precedes a general discussion of Vidal's early
novels. Each of the following chapters examines an individual
novel, from Julian (1964) to Live from Golgotha (1992), with
special emphasis on artistic development and historical and
intellectual context. To help the reader understand the recurring
themes in Vidal's fiction, Baker and Gibson group the novels by
type. First are the historical fictions, those of the ancient world
(Julian, Creation), and the American Chronicles, Vidal's family
saga of the United States over the course of its history. Second
are the social satires, what Vidal calls his inventions, of which
the best known is Myra Breckinridge. The discussion of each novel
includes sections on plot and character development, thematic
issues, narrative style, and an alternative critical approach from
which to read the novel. A complete bibliography of Vidal's
fiction, select bibliography of his other works, and bibliography
of reviews and criticism of the works examined complete the book
and will be helpful to students, librarians, and adult book
discussion participants. This long-needed up-to-date study of Gore
Vidal is a key purchase by secondary school and public libraries.
This is a comprehensive text on the methods - dietary,
anthropometric, laboratory and clinical - of assessing the
nutritional status of populations and of individuals in the
hospital or the community. This Second Edition incorporates recent
data from national nutritional surveys in the US and Europe; the
flood of new information about iron, vitamin A and iodine; the role
of folate in preventing neural tube defects; the use of HPLC
techniques and enzyme assays; improvements in data handling; and
many other developments.
A paperback edition of this book is available to readers living
outside of North America and Europe. Interested parties should
contact the author at: [email protected] http:
//nutrition.earthlight.co.nz
John Gibson, an expert on human rights, discusses the issues and
context of rights including the universality of rights, the
hierarchy of rights, and conflicts between rights, a discussion
that creates the framework for further research. The dictionary
entries on the sixty-six rights in international treaties and
declarations are divided into five categories: civil and political
rights; legal rights; economic, social, and cultural rights;
collective rights; and declaratory rights. Each entry contains the
treaty definition, other sources and treaties, an expanded
definition, historical landmarks in the development of the right,
and cross references. Includes an extensive bibliography. An
essential, one-of-a-kind reference source for graduate and
undergraduate students and professors of law, political science,
international relations, and history.
Originally published in 1936, this informative and engaging
textbook was primarily aimed at undergraduate students, who already
held a familiarity with the elementary principles of general
chemistry and physics. The book covers a wide variety of topics,
with a particular emphasis on laboratory work and 'the practical
side of the subject'. Chapter titles include, 'Aliphatic
hydrocarbons', 'Aldehydes and ketones' and 'Amino acids'. Diagrams,
a table of symbols, atomic numbers and atomic weights are included
for reference. This book will be of considerable value to scholars
of chemistry as well as to anyone with an interest in the history
of education.
The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal, which has been called the
most significant arbitral body in history, celebrated its 25th
anniversary in 2006. As of mid-2005, the Tribunal had issued over
800 awards and decisions--a total of 600 awards (including partial
awards and awards on agreed terms), 83 interlocutory and interim
awards, and 133 decisions--in resolving almost 3000 cases. The
Tribunal's awards have been described as the most important body of
international arbitration jurisprudence. The significance of these
decisions as persuasive authority is second to none.
In this volume, experts in the field identify and comment on the
Tribunal awards that are most important for international
arbitration; i.e., the cases that everyone needs to know for
investor-state and international commercial arbitration. The book
approaches the Tribunal's work from a forward-looking perspective
with emphasis on the continuing usefulness of awards and decisions
issued by the Tribunal in international arbitration practice.
In addition to original contributions from an array of eminent
authors (all of whom have extensive experience at the Tribunal
and/or in investor-State and international arbitration), this book
includes excerpts of key awards discussed in the contributions, as
well as appendices with foundational documents for the
Tribunal.
CONTRIBUTORS INCLUDE:
Roger P. Alford, Pepperdine University School of Law, former Legal
Assistant, Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
David J. Bederman, Emory Law School, former Legal Assistant,
Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
David D. Caron, C. William Maxeiner Distinguished Professor of
Law, University of California, Berkeley, former Legal Assistant,
Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
Jack J. Coe, Jr. Pepperdine University School of Law, former Legal
Assistant, Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
Christopher R. Drahozal, John M. Rounds Professor of Law,
University of Kansas School of Law; former Legal Assistant,
Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
Christopher S. Gibson, Suffolk University Law School; former Legal
Assistant, Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
Mark R. Joelson, Law Office of Mark R. Joelson
Lucinda A. Low, Steptoe & Johnson
Andrea J. Menaker, Office of the Legal Advisor, U.S. Department of
State
Sean D. Murphy, George Washington University Law School, former
U.S. Agent to the Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
Daniel M. Price, Sidley Austin, former Deputy U.S. Agent to the
Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal
Jeffrey F. Pryce, Steptoe & Johnson
No one can look at the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch without
amazement and bewilderment. Professor Gibson shows that what seems
inexplicable to us today--the canvases full of torture, monsters,
and leering devils--was perfectly intelligible to the
fifteenth-century viewer. The subjects of Bosch's paintings were in
fact the overwhelming concerns of late medieval Europe: the Last
Judgment, original sin, death, temptations of the flesh. The author
describes each picture in detail, placing each work within the
context of medieval folklore and religion, and explains that many
of the acts portrayed in the pictures were visual translations of
verbal puns or metaphors.
The United Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC) is a claims
reparation program created by the United Nations Security Council
in May 1991, after the UN-authorized Allied Coalition Forces'
military operations terminated the seven-month invasion and
occupation of Kuwait by Iraq and liberated Kuwait. The UNCC was
established with the objectives to receive and decide claims from
individuals, corporations, and governments against Iraq as arising
directly from Iraq's invasion and occupation of Kuwait; and to pay
compensation for such claims. Gulf War Reparations and the UN
Compensation Commission: Designing Compensation After Conflict is
the first collective work on the UNCC claims program by experts who
have contributed to its progress, and who have assisted in paving
the way for more informed research on the Commission and its
jurisprudence. Given its unprecedented, serious and sustained
effort within the international community, the two-decade long
operations of the UNCC deserve considerable attention and in-depth
analysis especially with respect to its impact on the development
and progress of international law in the areas of State
responsibility and reparations.
This edited volume brings together a series of contributions
exploring the socio-cultural and psychological representation of
peace and conflict. It ventures into areas of the humanities and
social sciences not typically foregrounded in Peace Studies, such
psychology, sociology, media studies, cultural studies, history,
and geography.
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Beautiful (Paperback)
Denis Proulx; Angela S. Gibson
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R300
Discovery Miles 3 000
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Synthetic collateralized debt obligations, or synthetic CDOs, are
popular vehicles for trading the credit risk of a portfolio of
assets. Following a brief summary of the development of the
synthetic CDO market, I draw on recent innovations in modeling to
present a pricing model for CDO tranches that does not require
Monte Carlo simulation. I use the model to analyze the risk
characteristics of the tranches of synthetic CDOs. The analysis
shows that although the more junior CDO tranches -- equity and
mezzanine tranches -- typically contain a small fraction of the
notional amount of the CDO's reference portfolio, they bear a
majority of the credit risk. One implication is that credit risk
disclosures relying on notional amounts are especially inadequate
for firms that invest in CDOs. I show how the equity and mezzanine
tranches can be viewed as leveraged exposures to the underlying
credit risk of the CDO's reference portfolio. Even though mezzanine
tranches are typically rated investment-grade, the leverage they
possess implies their risk (and expected return) can be many times
that of an investment-grade corporate bond. The paper goes on to
show how CDO tranches and other innovative credit products, such as
single-tranche CDOs and first-to-default basket swaps, are
sensitive to the correlation of defaults among the credits in the
reference portfolio. Differences of opinion among market
participants as to the correct default correlation can create
trading opportunities. Finally, the paper shows how the dependence
of CDO tranches on default correlation can also be characterized
and measured as an exposure to the business cycle, or as "business
cycle risk." A mezzanine tranche, in particular, is highly
sensitive to business cycle risk.
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