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Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
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The Doers (Paperback)
Roz Tucker-Shaw; Illustrated by Scott Ross
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R333
Discovery Miles 3 330
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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We are turning the clock back to times so very different from
today. Sixty years have passed - a long, long time away. A little
bit of history, incorporated in a story, pictures bringing it to
life. The adventures of two children, a husband and a wife.
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One World (Hardcover)
Scott Ross Maciver, Maciver George Maciver, George Maciver
bundle available
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R769
Discovery Miles 7 690
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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One World is the explosive tale of James Gilmour, a British SAS
soldier, and his personal fight with terrorism on mainland Britain.
During the assault of a hi-jacked aircraft, Gilmour befriends an
eight year old girl whose mother has been shot. After the assault,
Gilmour snatches the girl from Social workers he believes are not
working in her best interests. His actions bring down the fury of
his superiors and Gilmour finds himself being thrown out of the
Regiment. Returning from a shopping trip, the back doors of a
transit van burst open and guns are brandished. During the ensuing
scuffles an SAS mate is shot dead and Gilmour is taken hostage
along with the girl and a female Sergeant. With the American
President's State visit to Britain imminent, Whitehall finds itself
greatly alarmed over the shooting and kidnapping of SAS soldiers,
and tasks Peter Ellis, an unconventional freelance operative, to
investigate. From a dying man in a disused quarry on the outskirts
of Belfast, Ellis learns of an IRA terrorist cell operating on the
British mainland. Meanwhile, Gilmour is imprisoned in a cellar. He
kills one of his captors and escapes with the Sergeant, with whom
he is developing a powerful relationship, but of the girl there is
no sign and they are forced to abandon her. Gilmour and Ellis then
team up and return to the farmhouse where they uncover a clue that
leads the investigation to the Highlands of Scotland. As part of a
small patrol, Gilmour is parachuted into the Highlands to observe a
fishing lodge in a remote glen. The patrol witnesses the murder of
a young woman and recklessly assaults the lodge. During the
confrontation, a car bomb in a Range Rover detonates killing two of
the patrol members and seriously injuring a third. When Gilmour
regains consciousness, he searches the lodge and finds the girl,
only to be taken captive again, this time by al Qaeda terrorists.
Gilmour escapes, but again has no option but to leave the girl, and
becomes embroiled in a desperate race to rescue her, involving car
chases, helicopters and motorway shoot outs. Ellis meantime, finds
himself drawn into the ruthless world of a secret Religious Order
that will stop at nothing to accomplish its goal.
New Zealand's deceptively simple but effective program to improve
public servicesNew Zealand has long been considered at the
forefront of public administration, experimenting with new ways of
organizing and delivering public services. Even so, successive New
Zealand governments had mixed results from using traditional public
management tools to lift the performance of the public service and
address persistent problems that required multi-agency action. In
2012 the government decided to try something different. As part of
a reform package called Better Public Services, the government
challenged the public service to organize itself around achieving
just ten results that had proven resistant to previous
interventions. The plan was deceptively simple: set ambitious
targets and publicly report on progress every six months; hold
small groups of public managers collectively responsible; use lead
indicators; and learn from both success and failure. This book
explores how and why the New Zealand government made progress and
how the program was able to create and sustain the commitment of
public servants and unleash the creativity of public entrepreneurs.
The authors combine case studies based on the experience of people
involved in the change, together with public management research.
They explain how ambitious targets and public accountability were
used as levers to overcome the bureaucratic barriers that impeded
public service delivery, and how data, evidence, and innovation
were used to change practice. New Zealand experimented, failed,
succeeded, and learned from the experience over five years. This
New Zealand experience demonstrates that interagency performance
targets are a potentially powerful tool for fostering better public
services and thus improving social outcomes.
Sanjeev's dog Jigsaw is missing in the middle of winter in New
Jersey. But this tragedy is dwarfed by what happens to him in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. Has he really entered the 6th Century
and become the slave to monks traveling the Silk Road to Byzantium
- and might they just be murderers? Trouble is even if he figures
out how to get out of this, he's got other problems: someone, or
something, is coming after him. Part of the answer might be Sara, a
girl who contacts him on the net and keeps talking about the
Immortals. But who or what are The Three Hares and how can they
stop the darkness about to engulf the world?
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Wonderkid (Paperback)
Robert Scott Ross
bundle available
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R483
Discovery Miles 4 830
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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One World (Paperback)
Scott Ross Maciver
bundle available
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R517
R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
Save R54 (10%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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One World is the explosive tale of James Gilmour, a British SAS
soldier, and his personal fight with terrorism on mainland Britain.
During the assault of a hi-jacked aircraft, Gilmour befriends an
eight year old girl whose mother has been shot. After the assault,
Gilmour snatches the girl from Social workers he believes are not
working in her best interests. His actions bring down the fury of
his superiors and Gilmour finds himself being thrown out of the
Regiment. Returning from a shopping trip, the back doors of a
transit van burst open and guns are brandished. During the ensuing
scuffles an SAS mate is shot dead and Gilmour is taken hostage
along with the girl and a female Sergeant. With the American
President's State visit to Britain imminent, Whitehall finds itself
greatly alarmed over the shooting and kidnapping of SAS soldiers,
and tasks Peter Ellis, an unconventional freelance operative, to
investigate. From a dying man in a disused quarry on the outskirts
of Belfast, Ellis learns of an IRA terrorist cell operating on the
British mainland. Meanwhile, Gilmour is imprisoned in a cellar. He
kills one of his captors and escapes with the Sergeant, with whom
he is developing a powerful relationship, but of the girl there is
no sign and they are forced to abandon her. Gilmour and Ellis then
team up and return to the farmhouse where they uncover a clue that
leads the investigation to the Highlands of Scotland. As part of a
small patrol, Gilmour is parachuted into the Highlands to observe a
fishing lodge in a remote glen. The patrol witnesses the murder of
a young woman and recklessly assaults the lodge. During the
confrontation, a car bomb in a Range Rover detonates killing two of
the patrol members and seriously injuring a third. When Gilmour
regains consciousness, he searches the lodge and finds the girl,
only to be taken captive again, this time by al Qaeda terrorists.
Gilmour escapes, but again has no option but to leave the girl, and
becomes embroiled in a desperate race to rescue her, involving car
chases, helicopters and motorway shoot outs. Ellis meantime, finds
himself drawn into the ruthless world of a secret Religious Order
that will stop at nothing to accomplish its goal.
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