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The Kingdom/Jarhead (DVD)
Jamie Foxx, Chris Cooper, Jennifer Garner, Jason Bateman, Ashraf Barhom, …
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R25
Discovery Miles 250
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Double bill featuring movies that focus on America's recent
involvement in foreign countries. In 'The Kingdom' (2007), when a
terrorist bomb detonates inside a Western housing compound in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, an international incident is ignited. While
diplomats slowly debate equations of territorialism, FBI Special
Agent Ronald Fleury (Jamie Foxx) quickly assembles an elite team
and negotiates a secret five-day trip into Saudi Arabia to locate
the madman behind the bombing. Upon landing in the desert kingdom,
however, Fleury and his team discover Saudi authorities suspicious
and unwelcoming of American interlopers into what they consider a
local matter. Hamstrung by protocol, and with the clock ticking on
their five days, the FBI agents find their expertise worthless
without the trust of their Saudi counterparts who want to locate
the terrorist in their homeland on their own terms. Fleury's crew
finds a like-minded partner in Saudi Police Captain Al-Ghazi
(Ashraf Barhom), who helps them navigate royal politics and unlock
the secrets of the crime scene and the workings of an extremist,
hell bent on further destruction. 'Jarhead' (2006) is an adaptation
of former Marine Anthony Swofford's Gulf War memoir. Young recruit
Swofford (Jake Gyllenhaal) joins up with the US Marines (nicknamed
'Jarheads' because of their distinctive haircuts) on the eve of the
1990 Gulf War. After a brutal spell in boot camp, during which
Swofford and his fellow recruits are systematically geared up for
the conflict, the Marines are dispatched to the deserts of the
Persian Gulf to take part in a war that sees them required to do
very little in the way of fighting. Bored and frustrated in the
middle of nowhere, the young soldiers resort to a macabre sense of
humour as they wait for the war to happen to them.
The United States-Australia alliance has been an important
component of the US-led system of alliances that has underpinned
regional security in the Indo-Pacific since 1945. However, recent
geostrategic developments, in particular the rise of the People's
Republic of China, have posed significant challenges to this US-led
regional order. In turn, the growing strategic competition between
these two great powers has generated challenges to the longstanding
US-Australia alliance. Both the US and Australia are confronting a
changing strategic environment, and, as a result, the alliance
needs to respond to the challenges that they face. The US needs to
understand the challenges and risks to this vital relationship,
which is growing in importance, and take steps to manage it. On its
part, Australia must clearly identify its core common interests
with the US and start exploring what more it needs to do to attain
its stated policy preferences. This book consists of chapters
exploring US and Australian perspectives of the Indo-Pacific, the
evolution of Australia-US strategic and defence cooperation, and
the future of the relationship. Written by a joint US-Australia
team, the volume is aimed at academics, analysts, students, and the
security and business communities.
The United States-Australia alliance has been an important
component of the US-led system of alliances that has underpinned
regional security in the Indo-Pacific since 1945. However, recent
geostrategic developments, in particular the rise of the People's
Republic of China, have posed significant challenges to this US-led
regional order. In turn, the growing strategic competition between
these two great powers has generated challenges to the longstanding
US-Australia alliance. Both the US and Australia are confronting a
changing strategic environment, and, as a result, the alliance
needs to respond to the challenges that they face. The US needs to
understand the challenges and risks to this vital relationship,
which is growing in importance, and take steps to manage it. On its
part, Australia must clearly identify its core common interests
with the US and start exploring what more it needs to do to attain
its stated policy preferences. This book consists of chapters
exploring US and Australian perspectives of the Indo-Pacific, the
evolution of Australia-US strategic and defence cooperation, and
the future of the relationship. Written by a joint US-Australia
team, the volume is aimed at academics, analysts, students, and the
security and business communities.
While many introductory public administration textbooks contain a
dedicated chapter on ethics, The Public Administration Profession
is the first to utilize ethics as a lens for understanding the
discipline. Analyses of the ASPA Code of Ethics are deftly woven
into each chapter alongside complete coverage of the institutions,
processes, concepts, persons, history, and typologies a student
needs to gain a thorough grasp of public service as a field of
study and practice. Features include: A significant focus on
"public interests," nonprofit management, hybrid-private
organizations, contracting out and collaborations, and public
service at state and local levels. A careful examination of the
role that religion may play in public servants' decision making, as
well as the unignorable and growing role that faith-based
organizations play in public administration and nonprofit
management at large. End-of-chapter ethics case studies, key
concepts and persons, and dedicated "local community action steps"
in each chapter. Appendices dedicated to future public
administration and nonprofit career management, writing successful
papers throughout a student's career, and professional codes of
ethics. A comprehensive suite of online supplements, including:
lecture slides; quizzes and sample examinations for undergraduate
and graduate courses containing multiple choice, true-false,
identifications, and essay questions; chapter outlines with
suggestions for classroom discussion; and suggestions for use of
appendices, e.g., how to successfully write a short term paper, a
brief policy memo, resume, or a book review. Providing students
with a comprehensive introduction to the subject while offering
instructors an elegant new way to bring ethics prominently into the
curriculum, The Public Administration Profession is an ideal
introductory text for public administration and public affairs
courses at the undergraduate or graduate level.
The past thirty years have seen the proliferation of forms of
independent cinema that critique the conventions of mass-market
commercial movies from within the movie theater. Motion Studies
examines fifteen of the most suggestive and useful films from this
film tradition: No. 4 (Bottoms) by Yoko Ono, Wavelength by Michael
Snow, Serene Velocity by Ernie Gehr, Print Generation by J. J.
Murphy, Standard Gauge by Morgan Fisher, Zorns Lemma by Hollis
Frampton, Riddles of the Sphinx by Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen,
American Dreams by James Benning, The Ties that Bind by Su
Friedrich, From the Pole to the Equator by Yervant Gianikian and
Angela Ricci Lucchi, The Carriage Trade by Warren Sonbert,
Powaqqatsi by Godfrey Reggio, Naked Spaces - Living Is Round by
Trinh T Minh-ha, Journeys from Berlin 1971 by Yvonne Rainer and The
Journey by Peter Watkins. Through in-depth readings of these works,
Scott MacDonald takes viewers on a critical circumnavigation of the
conventions of moviegoing as seen by filmmakers who have rebelled
against the conventions. MacDonald's discussions do not merely
analyze the films; they provide a useful, accessible, jargon-free
critical apparatus for viewing avant-garde film, which communicates
the author's pleasure in exploring "impenetrable" works with
students and public audiences.
When we began to consider the scope of this book, we envisaged a
catalogue supplying at least one abstract definition for any
finitely generated group that the reader might propose. But we soon
realized that more or less arbitrary restrictions are necessary,
because interesting groups are so numerous. For permutation groups
of degree 8 or less (i. e., subgroups of e ), the reader cannot do
better than consult the 8 tables of JosEPHINE BuRNS (1915), while
keeping an eye open for misprints. Our own tables (on pages
134-143) deal with groups of low order, finiteandinfinite groups of
congruent transformations, symmetric and alternating groups, linear
fractional groups, and groups generated by reflections in real
Euclidean space of any number of dimensions. The best substitute
foramoreextensive catalogue is the description (in Chapter 2) of a
method whereby the reader can easily work out his own abstract
definition for almost any given finite group. This method is
sufficiently mechanical for the use of an electronic computer.
There is also a topological method (Chapter 3), suitable not only
for groups of low order but also for some infinite groups. This
involves choosing a set of generators, constructing a certain graph
(the Cayley diagram or DEHNsehe Gruppenbild), and embedding the
graph into a surface. Cases in which the surface is a sphere or a
plane are described in Chapter 4, where we obtain algebraically,
and verify topologically, an abstract definition for each of the 17
space groups of two-dimensional crystallography."
Effective financial planning for executives and entrepreneurs is
complex, dense, and impossible to reduce to a single,
easy-to-understand formula. Designed to emphasize the importance of
successful, targeted financial planning, this book begins by
telling a story about a fictional, but plausible, power couple and
their family who (spoiler alert!) do pretty much everything wrong
in securing their financial future. In most cases, they don't do
the things needed because they don't know what they are. Using this
story as a case study of an executive and an entrepreneur, the book
breaks down the case into chapters and offers practical discussions
of all the key financial planning components-investment planning,
tax planning, estate planning, philanthropic planning, risk
management, and equity-based compensation to name a few-with the
tools needed to tailor a plan for virtually every circumstance and
need. While there is no single plan that works for everybody, this
book provides a guide, with technical information alongside general
themes, focused on how to build an effective financial plan. In
addition to all the benefits of the first edition, this second
edition provides significant new content and insights for the
entrepreneur who is planning for a future liquidity event such as a
sale. It also provides detail on how to manage concentrated
ownership positions and on ESG investment strategies, a rapidly
growing investment theme. Finally, the second edition includes tax,
estate planning, regulatory, and other updates to reflect changes
since the first edition was published.
"American Ethnographic Film and Personal Documentary" is a critical
history of American filmmakers crucial to the development of
ethnographic film and personal documentary. The Boston and
Cambridge area is notable for nurturing these approaches to
documentary film via institutions such as the MIT Film Section and
the Film Study Center, the Carpenter Center and the Visual and
Environmental Studies Department at Harvard. Scott MacDonald uses
pragmatismOCOs focus on empirical experience as a basis for
measuring the groundbreaking achievements of such influential
filmmakers as John Marshall, Robert Gardner, Timothy Asch, Ed
Pincus, Miriam Weinstein, Alfred Guzzetti, Ross McElwee, Robb Moss,
Nina Davenport, Steve Ascher and Jeanne Jordan, Michel Negroponte,
John Gianvito, Alexander Olch, Amie Siegel, Ilisa Barbash, and
Lucien Castaing-Taylor. By exploring the cinematic, personal, and
professional relationships between these accomplished filmmakers,
MacDonald shows how a pioneering, engaged, and uniquely
cosmopolitan approach to documentary developed over the past half
century.
While many introductory public administration textbooks contain a
dedicated chapter on ethics, The Public Administration Profession
is the first to utilize ethics as a lens for understanding the
discipline. Analyses of the ASPA Code of Ethics are deftly woven
into each chapter alongside complete coverage of the institutions,
processes, concepts, persons, history, and typologies a student
needs to gain a thorough grasp of public service as a field of
study and practice. Features include: A significant focus on
"public interests," nonprofit management, hybrid-private
organizations, contracting out and collaborations, and public
service at state and local levels. A careful examination of the
role that religion may play in public servants' decision making, as
well as the unignorable and growing role that faith-based
organizations play in public administration and nonprofit
management at large. End-of-chapter ethics case studies, key
concepts and persons, and dedicated "local community action steps"
in each chapter. Appendices dedicated to future public
administration and nonprofit career management, writing successful
papers throughout a student's career, and professional codes of
ethics. A comprehensive suite of online supplements, including:
lecture slides; quizzes and sample examinations for undergraduate
and graduate courses containing multiple choice, true-false,
identifications, and essay questions; chapter outlines with
suggestions for classroom discussion; and suggestions for use of
appendices, e.g., how to successfully write a short term paper, a
brief policy memo, resume, or a book review. Providing students
with a comprehensive introduction to the subject while offering
instructors an elegant new way to bring ethics prominently into the
curriculum, The Public Administration Profession is an ideal
introductory text for public administration and public affairs
courses at the undergraduate or graduate level.
William Greaves is one of the most significant and compelling
American filmmakers of the past century. Best known for his
experimental film about its own making, Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take
One, Greaves was an influential independent documentary filmmaker
who produced, directed, shot, and edited more than a hundred films
on a variety of social issues and on key African American figures
ranging from Muhammad Ali to Ralph Bunche to Ida B. Wells. A
multitalented artist, his career also included stints as a
songwriter, a member of the Actors Studio, and, during the late
1960s, a producer and cohost of Black Journal, the first national
television show focused on African American culture and politics.
This volume provides the first comprehensive overview of
Greaves’s remarkable career. It brings together a wide range of
material, including a mix of incisive essays from critics and
scholars, Greaves’s own writings, an extensive meta-interview
with Greaves, conversations with his wife and collaborator Louise
Archambault Greaves and his son David, and a critical dossier on
Symbiopsychotaxiplasm. Together, they illuminate Greaves’s
mission to use filmmaking as a tool for transforming the ways
African Americans were perceived by others and the ways they saw
themselves. This landmark book is an essential resource on
Greaves’s work and his influence on independent cinema and
African-American culture.
Aquinas's discussions of moral issues are extensive, and range
well beyond the narrowly defined set of issues in the modern
tradition of moral philosophy. This volume explores the ethical
dimensions of a wide selection of philosophical and theological
topics in Aquinas's texts. It covers topics central to ethics, such
as happiness, moral virtue, and natural law, as well as related
topics pertaining to the metaphysical basis of Aquinas's account of
goodness, the ramifications of his ethical concerns for his
philosophy of language, and the significance of his philosophical
psychology for his ethics.
The volume is divided into three sections focusing,
respectively, on issues concerning moral theory and moral theology,
moral psychology and practical reason, and moral theory in
philosophy of language and metaphysics. The authors distinguished
scholars of medieval philosophy bring to these issues a variety of
approaches and viewpoints. By creatively sampling the breadth of
Aquinas's reflections on ethical issues and exploring some of the
significant connections that tie his moral thought to other parts
of his philosophical and theological system, they display the
richness and depth of Aquinas's moral thinking.
Contributors: Jan A. Aertsen, Thomas-Institut, Cologne; E.
Jennifer Ashworth, University of Waterloo; John Boler, University
of Washington; Mark D. Jordan, Emory University; Anthony Kenny,
Oxford University; Peter King, University of Toronto; Scott
MacDonald, Cornell University; Gareth B. Matthews, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst; Paul Vincent Spade, Indiana University;
Eleonore Stump, Saint Louis University"
Aquinas's discussions of moral issues are extensive, and range
well beyond the narrowly defined set of issues in the modern
tradition of moral philosophy. This volume explores the ethical
dimensions of a wide selection of philosophical and theological
topics in Aquinas's texts. It covers topics central to ethics, such
as happiness, moral virtue, and natural law, as well as related
topics pertaining to the metaphysical basis of Aquinas's account of
goodness, the ramifications of his ethical concerns for his
philosophy of language, and the significance of his philosophical
psychology for his ethics.
The volume is divided into three sections focusing,
respectively, on issues concerning moral theory and moral theology,
moral psychology and practical reason, and moral theory in
philosophy of language and metaphysics. The authors distinguished
scholars of medieval philosophy bring to these issues a variety of
approaches and viewpoints. By creatively sampling the breadth of
Aquinas's reflections on ethical issues and exploring some of the
significant connections that tie his moral thought to other parts
of his philosophical and theological system, they display the
richness and depth of Aquinas's moral thinking.
Contributors: Jan A. Aertsen, Thomas-Institut, Cologne; E.
Jennifer Ashworth, University of Waterloo; John Boler, University
of Washington; Mark D. Jordan, Emory University; Anthony Kenny,
Oxford University; Peter King, University of Toronto; Scott
MacDonald, Cornell University; Gareth B. Matthews, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst; Paul Vincent Spade, Indiana University;
Eleonore Stump, Saint Louis University"
The intuition that there is a necessary connection between being
and goodness has guided a philosophical tradition that includes
Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Boethius, and Aquinas; but
surprisingly, the details of this legacy remain relatively unknown.
In exploring this tradition of philosophical reflection on the
nature of goodness, the twelve essays in this book (all but two
published here for the first time) present some of the best recent
historical scholarship in medieval philosophy and make available to
nonspecialists an array of sophisticated treatments of issues that
remain central to metaphysics and philosophical theology. The
contributors, leading philosophers and scholars of medieval
philosophy, represent a variety of points of view and take diverse
methodological approaches. They address the works of figures from
Augustine and Boethius to Suarez, Descartes, and Leibniz, but focus
particularly on thirteenth-century thinkers, especially Aquinas.
William Greaves is one of the most significant and compelling
American filmmakers of the past century. Best known for his
experimental film about its own making, Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take
One, Greaves was an influential independent documentary filmmaker
who produced, directed, shot, and edited more than a hundred films
on a variety of social issues and on key African American figures
ranging from Muhammad Ali to Ralph Bunche to Ida B. Wells. A
multitalented artist, his career also included stints as a
songwriter, a member of the Actors Studio, and, during the late
1960s, a producer and cohost of Black Journal, the first national
television show focused on African American culture and politics.
This volume provides the first comprehensive overview of Greaves's
remarkable career. It brings together a wide range of material,
including a mix of incisive essays from critics and scholars,
Greaves's own writings, an extensive meta-interview with Greaves,
conversations with his wife and collaborator Louise Archambault
Greaves and his son David, and a critical dossier on
Symbiopsychotaxiplasm. Together, they illuminate Greaves's mission
to use filmmaking as a tool for transforming the ways African
Americans were perceived by others and the ways they saw
themselves. This landmark book is an essential resource on
Greaves's work and his influence on independent cinema and
African-American culture.
Cultural tourism, domestic and international, is comprised of
travel that takes people out of their usual environments and
focuses on activities that are related to the cultural aspects of
an area. Rapid progress in technology, especially the advancement
of mobile applications, has changed various aspects of travel,
especially in areas such as transportation. Cultural Tourism in the
Wake of Web Innovation: Emerging Research and Opportunities is an
essential scholarly book that examines revolutionary changes taking
place in the field of cultural tourism that are a result of the
applications of web-based and other information technologies
including Web 2.0 innovations, locational technologies, and digital
imaging. It features a wide range of topics such as economic
development, mobile applications, and green development, and is
intended for use by hotel management, travel agents, event
organizers and planners, airline managers, academicians,
researchers, students, and professionals in the tourism and
hospitality industry.
This book is intended for students, policy makers, lawyers and
experts in the field of substance use and crashes. I describe in
simple terms epidemiological issues important for understanding
whether conclusions from studies are justifiable and discover
numerous myths and truths about cannabis and driving.
Cultural tourism, domestic and international, is comprised of
travel that takes people out of their usual environments and
focuses on activities that are related to the cultural aspects of
an area. Rapid progress in technology, especially the advancement
of mobile applications, has changed various aspects of travel,
especially in areas such as transportation. Cultural Tourism in the
Wake of Web Innovation: Emerging Research and Opportunities is an
essential scholarly book that examines revolutionary changes taking
place in the field of cultural tourism that are a result of the
applications of web-based and other information technologies
including Web 2.0 innovations, locational technologies, and digital
imaging. It features a wide range of topics such as economic
development, mobile applications, and green development, and is
intended for use by hotel management, travel agents, event
organizers and planners, airline managers, academicians,
researchers, students, and professionals in the tourism and
hospitality industry.
This workbook is designed to provide a good grounding of the most
commonly used analytic approaches in the health sciences, using the
Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS). Topics covered
include creation of a database, aggregation of data, data
transformations, scale development, t-tests, cross tabulations,
ANOVA, logistic regression, correlation and regression. Notes and
slides are included in each Chapter that describe the essentials of
each analytic approach. As well, data from the Canadian Community
Health Survey are analyzed to illustrate the application of each
approach. SPSS output is included, with the most important elements
for a research paper highlighted and interpreted.
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