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Showing 1 - 22 of
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The Warming (Paperback)
Stanley Johnson
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R314
R260
Discovery Miles 2 600
Save R54 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The United Nations Conference on the Environment and Development
brought over 100 governments together in Rio de Janeiro (3-14 June
1992) to agree action and legal bases for the future protection of
the environment. This text elucidates the UNCED process and the
Conference itself by assembling the key documents, including the
final version of Agenda 21, and using them to recount how UNCED
began, developed and finally, in Rio, came to fruition. Each
document is preceded by analytical commentary, and a comprehensive
index has been included.
Life in Washington DC is trying to 'return to normal' after the
trauma of September 11, 2001. George W. Bush is President and
Hillary Clinton, former First Lady and now Senator for New York,
already has her eye on higher things. One morning Su Soeung, who
first came to the US as a child refugee from Cambodia receives an
intriguing job offer. So begins an extraordinary train of events.
Su's efforts to discover the fate of her father who 'disappeared'
during Cambodia's Pol Pot nightmare, seem to be inextricably
intertwined with world politics at the highest level. Just how much
did the US know about Pol Pot and his band of 'brothers'? What
deals were done between Washington and Beijing? And, in the end, is
Su Soeung just a puppet of forces beyond her control? This is
Stanley Johnson's 11th - and finest - literary thriller yet -
tense, provocative, and deeply resonant of our current times, as
conspiracy theory and trauma once again put question marks over the
aims of the superpowers.
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The Virus (Paperback)
Stanley Johnson
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R310
R256
Discovery Miles 2 560
Save R54 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Initially published in 1982 as The Marburg Virus, Johnson's The
Virusreveals uncanny parallels with the current corona virus: the
outbreak of a mysterious and deadly disease, the origins of which
are traced to a medical student infected by a green monkey. It
features an epidemiologist as its hero and a desperate search for a
vaccine...
The International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo
in 1994 represented a remarkable watershed. Not only did it produce
an unprecedented degree of agreement among the 179 countries and
thousands of non-governmental organizations taking part, it also
created a wide-ranging Programme of Action which for the first time
offers real chances of progress, by putting population policies at
the heart of the struggle for social development. This book
recounts what actually happened in Cairo and how it was achieved.
The early chapters look in some detail at the preparations for
Cairo, in the context of over three decades of attempts to
integrate population, development and environmental issues.
Focusing on the key controversial questions, including abortion,
contraception and adolescent sex, it examines the ways in which
attempts were made to reconcile opposing positions. Setting the
discussion in a much wider context, it argues that Cairo witnessed
a 'quantum leap' in the way the population issue is seen, and the
need to give them control over their own lives, - central to the
discussion about population, resources and development. The
Programme of Action which emerged from the conference, particularly
the parts dealing with gender issues (included here in appendices),
is the most forward-looking ever adopted. As a whole the Programme
is probably one of the most important social documents of our time.
This book captures both the drama and the detail of its creation.
Stanley Johnson edited The Population Problem (1974) and is the
author of World Population and the United Nations (1987) and World
Population Turning the Tide (1994), as well as numerous other
books, including eight novels. Originally published in 1995
The International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo
in 1994 represented a remarkable watershed. Not only did it produce
an unprecedented degree of agreement among the 179 countries and
thousands of non-governmental organizations taking part, it also
created a wide-ranging Programme of Action which for the first time
offers real chances of progress, by putting population policies at
the heart of the struggle for social development. This book
recounts what actually happened in Cairo and how it was achieved.
The early chapters look in some detail at the preparations for
Cairo, in the context of over three decades of attempts to
integrate population, development and environmental issues.
Focusing on the key controversial questions, including abortion,
contraception and adolescent sex, it examines the ways in which
attempts were made to reconcile opposing positions. Setting the
discussion in a much wider context, it argues that Cairo witnessed
a 'quantum leap' in the way the population issue is seen, and the
need to give them control over their own lives, - central to the
discussion about population, resources and development. The
Programme of Action which emerged from the conference, particularly
the parts dealing with gender issues (included here in appendices),
is the most forward-looking ever adopted. As a whole the Programme
is probably one of the most important social documents of our time.
This book captures both the drama and the detail of its creation.
Stanley Johnson edited The Population Problem (1974) and is the
author of World Population and the United Nations (1987) and World
Population Turning the Tide (1994), as well as numerous other
books, including eight novels. Originally published in 1995
2016. The world is on the brink of crisis. Who could have predicted
how events would play out? In this satirical thriller, Stanley
Johnson, former MEP and father to Prime Minister Boris Johnson,
just might have. In Britain, the British Prime Minister Jeremy
Hartley is fighting a referendum he thought couldn't be lost. In
the USA, brash showman, Ronald Craig is fighting a Presidential
Election nobody thought he could win. In the USSR, Igor Popov, the
Russian President, is using both events as part of his plan to
destabilise the West.
2016. The world is on the brink of crisis. Who could have predicted
how events would play out? In this satirical thriller, Stanley
Johnson, former MEP and father to Prime Minister Boris Johnson,
just might have. In Britain, the British Prime Minister Jeremy
Hartley is fighting a referendum he thought couldn't be lost. In
the USA, brash showman, Ronald Craig is fighting a Presidential
Election nobody thought he could win. In the USSR, Igor Popov, the
Russian President, is using both events as part of his plan to
destabilise the West.
The rip-roaring and hilarious memoir from Stanley Johnson--the
father of London mayor Boris Johnson--begins with a loud bang when
Stanley's father, an RAF pilot in World War II, crash-lands a
Wellington bomber on a Devon airfield. A few years later Stanley's
parents buy a sheep farm on nearby Exmoor, where Stanley does much
of his growing up. Stanley would keep his links with this
much-loved rural idyll throughout his life--while going on to
become an explorer, author, occasional politician, and also one of
the world's first environmentalists. A sparkling raconteur and
experienced thriller writer, Stanley tells great stories in great
style. On leaving school in 1958 Stanley traveled alone through
South America--hitching rides across the jungle on Brazilian Air
Force planes--and shortly afterwards he rode a motorcycle 4,000
miles from London to Afghanistan, tracing the route of Marco Polo
with two friends. After winning Oxford University's poetry prize
with a love poem--written following a hilltop tryst in the West
Country--Stanley went on to do various adventurous jobs, before
working for the billionaire John D. Rockefeller III, the World
Bank, the United Nations, and the European Union. Stanley married
and started a family young--Boris was born in New York when his
father was 23--and while Boris would go on to become big news, the
family's forbears also provide quite a story, as Stanley finds out.
For the Johnson family's roots are not just in the West Country,
but in Turkey too--where, as Stanley discovers, his politician
grandfather Ali Kemal was torn to pieces by an angry mob. Stanley
visits a Turkish village where the locals are blonde--later he
learns that he and Boris are direct descendants of George II.
Designed to teach students how to gather, write, and edit news stories, The Complete Reporter discusses the techniques that are used every day in the news business. Through a combination of descriptive text, examples, demonstrations, and exercises, this book makes fundamental concepts clear while instilling task-specific news and feature story writing skills. Along with introducing students to basic discussions about the field of reporting and basic writing, editing, and design skills, this text provides them with key guidelines and tips for writing general and specialty stories (see Parts IV-VII). Practical exercises throughout each chapter give students experience with realistic writing situations. Based on actual newspaper articles, the exercises present a series of reporter's notes prepared at the scene of a story. Usable facts, libelous and/or unethical statements, and trivial tidbits are lumped together in order to test and help build students' judgment skills — and their ability to create tightly woven stories from a jumble of information.
This volume brings together four lecture courses on modern aspects
of water waves. The intention, through the lectures, is to present
quite a range of mathematical ideas, primarily to show what is
possible and what, currently, is of particular interest. Water
waves of large amplitude can only be fully understood in terms of
nonlinear effects, linear theory being not adequate for their
description. Taking advantage of insights from physical
observation, experimental evidence and numerical simulations,
classical and modern mathematical approaches can be used to gain
insight into their dynamics. The book presents several avenues and
offers a wide range of material of current interest. The lectures
provide a useful source for those who want to begin to investigate
how mathematics can be used to improve our understanding of water
wave phenomena. In addition, some of the material can be used by
those who are already familiar with one branch of the study of
water waves, to learn more about other areas.
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The Warming (Paperback)
Stanley Johnson
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R412
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
Save R43 (10%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book is dedicated in educating all who want to learn
self-help/care Alternative Health Treatments for all God's children
to learn about "God's Prescription For Diseases."
Allotment and small-scale gardeners seeking to gain the most
productivity from their land will benefit from the advice in this
1918 work.
Based on actual events of World War II, the book tells the story of
American pilot Second Lieutenant Tommy Kohlhaas following the crash
landing of his B-17 Flying Fortress bomber in Germany and of his
capture the next day. The narrative also describes the daily life
of American aviators during WWII as they prepared for flights and
dodged enemy fire during the dangerous bombing runs over Germany.
This work recounts the successful story of national and
international approaches to the population question from the 1960s
to the present, and examines the progress made in reducing rapid
rates of population growth and high levels of fertility. It
describes the evolution of national population policies by
governments, their aims, successes and shortcomings, and explores
the emergence of international agencies seeking to reinforce and
underpin those commitments. This study draws on documents and
sources, and assesses the achievements of the 1974 Bucharest World
Population Conference, the 1984 International Conference on
Population in Mexico and the several major national and
international initiatives that followed them, up to the 1992 UN
Conference on Environment and Development in Rio. The book examines
the prospects for a new international consensus in population, and
considers the preparation for the International Conference on
Population and Development in Cairo in 1994. The text is
supplemented with annex materials.
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The Virus (Paperback)
Stanley Johnson
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R443
R392
Discovery Miles 3 920
Save R51 (12%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume of the Encyclopedia of Sustainability Science and
Technology, Second Edition, provides a broad and comprehensive view
of air pollution, extending from ground-level, localized air
quality and regional and global air quality and effects, to sensors
and measurement and air pollution control. Despite substantial
improvements in many parts of the world, globally, air pollution
remains the most hazardous environmental threat. The increasing
quality of exposure assessments, access to new and better
statistical methods, and more complete and precise health data have
led to stronger associations between air pollution exposure and
health effects. Air pollution exposure-effect relationships have
now been established for a wide variety of health outcomes, and
well documented through parallel studies in many countries around
the world using a variety of approaches and methodologies.
Assessments of the health effects in the population are now
performed on a routine basis in many countries and by many
agencies, and often these also include calculation of externalities
associated with the negative health effects. Such knowledge is
essential for pushing development towards a more sustainable
society. This volume covers topics including, but not limited to,
basic knowledge to understand foundational concepts and drivers of
regional and global air pollution in relation to air quality and
ways to sense, measure and control pollutants, while placing this
knowledge into the perspectives of health and technological
systems.
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