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A searing look at diet culture and all its ugly consequences, from the
talented writer of Influential.
New year, new me!
That's what Saffron Saldana tells herself as the clock strikes midnight
on New Year's Eve.
Her resolution is the same every year: lose weight.
Because Saffron has it hard-wired that weight loss equals happiness.
It's what she's been told her whole life - online, in magazines,
especially by her own diet-obsessed mother. But dieting is hard.
So to escape her own reality, Saffron creates Sydney, a super-slim,
AI-generated 'perfect' version of herself. Boys online love Sydney, and
for Saffron, it's just a bit of harmless fun.
Until the boundaries of her life online and offline begin to blur . . .
And one boy in particular makes her question her desire to be someone
she's not.
Can Saffron find a way back to herself, and learn to love who she
actually is?
Girl: Ultra-Processed explores what it is like to be a teenage girl in
our current body-obsessed world while juggling family drama, friend
dynamics, dating, betrayals and major life changes.
This book brings together a series of papers and responses to papers presented at a conference on the minimum core content of socio-economic rights in Pretoria, South Africa, during August 2000.
The papers describe, first from an international law perspective and then from a South African perspective, these socio-economic rights. In the process, the normative content of rights concerned is given flesh: the authors identify particular obligations that can be said to form the core of rights, such as the right to housing, the right to food, rights to education and social security and assistance. At the same time, the concept of a minimum core obligations of economic and social rights is problematised and the difficulties of using concepts, developed within the general and abstract realm of international law, in the more particular and concrete context of domestic rights adjudication are explored.
As a result, this book contains a great deal of practical information and is useful for human rights practitioners, both legal and non-legal. It also provides some critical reflection on the conceptual framework from which it is derived.
She thrives in chaos. He prefers routine. The only thing they have in common? How much they hate each other.
From the bestselling author of Done and Dusted and Swift and Saddled, the highly anticipated next book in the Rebel Blue Ranch series, a small-town romance in which enemies turn to lovers when they’re forced to work together during one hot summer.
Teddy Andersen doesn’t have a plan. She’s never needed one before. She’s always been more of a go-with-the-flow type of girl, but for some reason, the flow doesn’t seem to be going her way this time.
Her favorite vintage suede jacket has a hole in it, her sewing machine is broken, and her best friend just got engaged. Suddenly, everything feels like it’s starting to change. Teddy is used to being a leader, but now she feels like she’s getting left behind, wondering if life in the small town she loves is enough for her anymore.
Gus Ryder has a lot on his plate. He doesn’t know what’s harder: taking care of his family’s 8,000 acre ranch, or parenting his spunky six-year-old daughter, who is staying with him for the summer. Gus has always been the dependable one, but when his workload starts to overwhelm him, he has to admit that he can’t manage everything on his own. He needs help.
His little sister’s best friend, the woman he can’t stand, is not who he had in mind. But when no one else can step in, Teddy’s the only option he’s got. Teddy decides to use the summer to try and figure out what she wants out of life. Gus, on the other hand, starts to worry that he’ll never find what he needs.
Tempers flare, tension builds, and for the first time ever, Gus and Teddy start to see each other in a different light. As new feelings start to simmer below the surface, they must decide whether they should act on them. Can they keep things cool? Or will both of them get burned?
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We Are What We Are (DVD)
Kelly McGillis, Ambyr Childers, Odeya Rush, Wyatt Russell, Michael Parks, …
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R53
Discovery Miles 530
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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American re-imagining of the 2010 Mexican horror film of the same
name. The reclusive Parker family headed by ailing patriarch Frank
(Bill Sage) have a dark and macabre family secret. While grieving
for their mother, Iris (Ambyr Childers) and Rose (Julia Garner) are
left to care for their father and younger brother Rory (Jack Gore)
as well as take responsibility for attending to their horrific
familial custom. As a storm hits the small town where the family
live, a number of gruesome discoveries by the local authorities
lead them to the door of the Parkers and ever closer to the
ancestral secret they work so hard to maintain.
This timely book emphasizes the importance of regulation in
enabling and channelling innovation at a time when technology is
increasingly embedded in healthcare. It considers the adequacy of
current regulatory approaches, identifying apparent gaps, risks and
liabilities, and discusses how these might be collectively
addressed. The authors present possible solutions that balance the
protection and promotion of public trust in healthcare against
enabling technological progress and disruptive innovation. Offering
both a theoretical and practical approach to challenges at the
intersection of healthcare, law and technology, this
thought-provoking book explores broad questions of regulation and
innovation before analysing contextual applications of these
topics. It moves from a wide-ranging consideration of the
polycentric and changing nature of health regulation through to a
more specific examination of topics including patient consent, the
role of device representatives, privacy, artificial intelligence
and big data. Providing an international perspective, Technology,
Innovation and Healthcare will be a valuable resource for scholars
and students of health law, innovation, technology law, law and
development and law and society. It will also be of benefit to
lawyers, healthcare professionals, technology developers and policy
makers, seeking to better integrate technology with healthcare.
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