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Whenever a group of individuals comes together and interact in
order to reach a common goal, differing individual preferences can
lead to conflict. This book focuses on the management of these
internal conflicts within business organizations. Peter-J. Jost and
Utz Weitzel analyze organizational conflicts and illustrate how the
parties involved utilize strategic actions to achieve a desired
outcome in conflict. The authors use numerous examples of internal
conflicts that are well-known to both practitioners and academics
to define and explain the basic concepts of game theory. They then
focus on the management of conflict, highlighting how the strategic
behavior of conflicting parties can be influenced by direct
governance or by changing organizational framework parameters. In
contrast to much of the existing literature in this field, the
focus is not on formal definitions or mathematical proofs, but
solely on the application of game theory to strategic conflict
management. This book represents a valuable tool in the assessment
of organizational conflicts from a fresh, strategic perspective
underpinned by game theory. It will therefore prove fascinating
reading for scholars and practitioners with an interest in a broad
range of fields encompassing business and management, strategic
management, organizational studies, human resource management and
game theory.
Working Mothers in Europe combines comparative perspectives on
social policies with analyses of mothers' practices as evidenced in
macro data and as explored in country based case studies. Social
policy research has emphasised the impact of particular welfare
systems and their policies on women's integration into the labour
market and the organisation of care and work. However, the authors
argue that policies are not the only factor, and, hitherto, we have
very little knowledge of the precise interactions between social
policies and social practices of individuals and families. In order
to accurately grasp the cross-country variation of mothers' work
and care arrangements in Europe, this book assembles a comparative
approach towards welfare systems and social policies with an
analysis of mothers' social practices in several European
countries. Exploring the ways in which working mothers manage to
combine care responsibilities and paid work on the basis of diverse
public and private resources, this book will be invaluable to
academics, researchers and students interested in the social
sciences. More generally, the book will greatly appeal to those
with an interest in women's employment, gender relations and the
needs of children as matters that are tackled in the interaction
between social policy and individuals.
This volume considers the uses and misuses of the memory of
assistance given to Jews during the Holocaust, deliberated in
local, national, and transnational contexts. History of this aid
has drawn the attention of scholars and the general public alike.
Stories of heroic citizens who hid and rescued Jewish men, women,
and children have been adapted into books, films, plays, public
commemorations, and museum exhibitions. Yet, emphasis on the
uplifting narratives often obscures the history of violence and
complicity with Nazi policies of persecution and mass murder. Each
of the ten essays in this interdisciplinary collection is dedicated
to a different country: Belarus, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece,
North Macedonia, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia, and Ukraine.
The case studies provide new insights into what has emerged as one
of the most prominent and visible trends in recent Holocaust memory
and memory politics. While many of the essays focus on recent
developments, they also shed light on the evolution of this
phenomenon since 1945.
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Life Below the City (Paperback)
Claude Delafosse, Ute Fuhr, Raoul Sautai; Translated by Penelope Stanley-Baker
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R239
R215
Discovery Miles 2 150
Save R24 (10%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Walking through a city, you'll see lots of buildings and statues -
but to discover the hidden world below the streets, you'll need
your 'magic' torch and your sense of adventure! Explore the cellar
beneath the house, the pipes below the pavements, and the car parks
and underground trains that run under our feet. Maybe you'll even
uncover the fascinating remains of an ancient city, if you're
lucky. This title is part of the My First Discovery paperback
series - a unique collection of beautifully illustrated information
books for children aged 4 to 7, with simple language to aid
learning and realistic artwork to inspire young minds. This edition
contains a paper torch at the back of the book, revealing hidden
secrets on the 4 darkened transparent pages and making the story
come alive - one detail at a time. With free access to a brand new
audio app, children can listen and read along at their own pace,
page by page.
This book provides a guided approach to the geostatistical
modelling of compositional spatial data. These data are data in
proportions, percentages or concentrations distributed in space
which exhibit spatial correlation. The book can be divided into
four blocks. The first block sets the framework and provides some
background on compositional data analysis. Block two introduces
compositional exploratory tools for both non-spatial and spatial
aspects. Block three covers all necessary facets of multivariate
spatial prediction for compositional data: variogram modelling,
cokriging and validation. Finally, block four details strategies
for simulation of compositional data, including transformations to
multivariate normality, Gaussian cosimulation, multipoint
simulation of compositional data, and common postprocessing
techniques, valid for both Gaussian and multipoint methods. All
methods are illustrated via applications to two types of data sets:
one a large-scale geochemical survey, comprised of a full suite of
geochemical variables, and the other from a mining context, where
only the elements of greatest importance are considered. R codes
are included for all aspects of the methodology, encapsulated in
the R package "gmGeostats", available in CRAN.
Jurgen Weber is known for his behavioral perspective on controlling
and has made a lasting impact in German speaking countries during
the past three decades. This anniversary volume compiles some of
his outstanding publications from that period and presents them for
the first time in English. In addition, it contains a current
publication index of Jurgen Weber's entire body of work.
This publication is a record of the sessions presented during the
annual conference of the South Central Association for Language
Learning Technology (SOCALLT) held at the University of Colorado in
Boulder on April 13-14, 2002. All authors are current members of
the organization. The articles of these proceedings focus on a
variety of issues dealing with the integration of technology into
the foreign language curriculum, the role of technology in the
teaching and learning process, language media development,
professional development, and language center management.
People and Change in Australia arose from a conviction that more
needs to be done in anthropology to give a fuller sense of the
changing lives and circumstances of Australian indigenous
communities and people. Much anthropological and public discussion
remains embedded in traditionalizing views of indigenous people,
and in accounts that seem to underline essential and apparently
timeless difference. In this volume the editors and contributors
assume that "the person" is socially defined and reconfigured as
contexts change, both immediate and historical. Essays in this
collection are grounded in Australian locales commonly termed
"remote." These indigenous communities were largely established as
residential concentrations by Australian governments, some first as
missions, most in areas that many of the indigenous people involved
consider their homelands. A number of these settlements were
located in proximity to settler industries including pastoralism,
market-gardening, and mining. These are the locales that many
non-indigenous Australians think of as the homes of the most
traditional indigenous communities and people. The contributors
discuss the changing circumstances of indigenous people who
originate from such places. Some remain, while others travel far
afield. The accounts reveal a diversity of experiences and
histories that involve major dynamics of disembedding from country
and home locales, and re-embedding in new contexts, and
reconfigurations of relatedness. The essays explore dimensions of
change and continuity in childhood experience and socialization in
a desert community; the influence of Christianity in fostering both
individuation and relatedness in northeast Arnhem Land; the
diaspora of Central Australian Warlpiri people to cities and the
forms of life and livelihood they make there; adolescent
experiences of schooling away from home communities; youth in
kin-based heavy metal gangs configuring new identities, and
indigenous people of southeast Australia reflecting on whether an
"Aboriginal way" can be sustained. The volume takes a step toward
understanding the relation between changing circumstances and
changing lives of indigenous Australians today and provides a sense
of the quality and the feel of those lives.
'German militarism' has long been understood to be a central
element of German society. Considering the role of militarism, this
book investigates how conscription has contributed to instilling a
strong sense of military commitment amongst the German public.A
Nation in Barracks tells the story of how military-civil relations
have evolved in Germany during the last two hundred years. Focusing
on the introduction and development of military conscription, the
author looks at its relationship to state citizenship, nation
building, gender formation and the concept of violence. She begins
with the early nineteenth century, when conscription was first used
in Prussia and initially met with harsh criticism from all aspects
of society, and continues through to the two Germanies of the
post-1949 period. The book covers the Prussian model used during
World War I, the Weimar Republic when no conscription was enforced
and the mass military mobilization of the Third Reich.Throughout
this comprehensive account, acclaimed historian Ute Frevert
examines how civil society deals with institutionalized violence
and how this affects models of citizenship and gender relations.
This important translation looks at World War I from the
perspective of German working-class women. The author demonstrates
the intimate connection between 'general' social history and
women's history while analyzing the dynamics between these
different levels of interpretation. She asks:
- How did women view the war and whom did they hold responsible for
it?
- How did military leaders and politicians perceive women at work,
in the home, and
on the streets?
This book explores the ways in which the people themselves
interpreted their world and their lives -- a perspective often
neglected by historians but one becoming increasingly relevant in
Germany today. Essential reading for all those interested in War
Studies, German Studies, History and Women's Studies and an
excellent text for course use.
This book is the first to offer a conceptual framework of
English-medium education that can be used across different
international higher education (HE) contexts. It provides readers
with an understanding of the complexities, possibilities and
challenges that this phenomenon raises in the 21st century. Making
the case for the pressing need for an overarching
conceptualisation, the authors discuss, from a theoretical point of
view, the recently introduced ROAD-MAPPING framework for 'English
Medium Education in Multilingual University Settings' (EMEMUS).
Drawing on current research and examples from a variety of
settings, the book makes a strong case for the applicability of the
framework in two important directions: as a methodological tool for
researching educational practices and as an analytical guide to
examine policies and teacher education programmes.
Africa is known for its multi-faceted immaterial culture,
manifested in highly original music, oral texts, artistic
performances and sporting events. These cultural expressions are
increasingly regulated by intellectual property rights, as orally
transmitted stories are written down, traditional songs broadcast
and ownership claimed, and sporting activities once part of village
life become national media events. This volume brings together an
interdisciplinary team of legal experts, anthropologists and
literary scholars to explore, from an African point of view, what
happens to intangible cultural goods when they are confronted with
large-scale commodification and distribution through media
technologies, and globalized and divergent judicial systems,
institutions and cultural norms. These transformations are observed
in contexts that range from Senegalese wrestling contests to beauty
pageants in Mali, from Kenyan hip-hop to the Nigerian novel, from
the vuvuzela horn to Cameroonian masks. Contributors address the
role of the state and the legacy of the European origination of IP
laws, as well as the forms of ownership, technologies of mediation
and degrees of commercialization that existed pre-colonially in
different African societies. Resisting a single narrative of the
imposition of a Western legal regime displacing older African
modes, a more complex picture is revealed of the intricate
interconnections between pirates, artists, communities, governments
and international organizations. It is only when local actors
embrace technologies and regulations in a specific historical
situation that these become influential forces for change. The
question raised is not whether international IP norms conform to
African practices, nor whether media impose Western styles, but
rather what local actors do with these regulations and how both
local and Western practices and technologies impact on each other
and co-exist. 'Intellectual property (IP) has become central to
global governance but we have little idea of how this international
legislation plays out on the ground. This pioneering book shows how
local actors use IP rather than the other way around. A must-read
for anyone interested in intellectual property.' Isabel Hofmeyr,
Visiting Global Distinguished Professor, New York University;
Professor of African Literature, University of the Witwatersrand 'A
deeply engaging and evidence-rich analysis of the worlds into which
intellectual property law, specifically copyright law, has entered
in Africa and its effect on these worlds. This collection
illustrates the best of what edited volumes can do: create a
diverse, informed, and compelling conversation about a specific yet
complex topic.' Dr. Hauke Dorsch, AMA African Music Archives,
Johannes Gutenberg Universitat Mainz
The "smart mobile" has become an essential and inseparable part of
our lives. This powerful tool enables us to perform multi-tasks in
different modalities of voice, text, gesture, etc. The user plays
an important role in the mode of operation, so multimodal
interaction provides the user with new complex multiple modalities
of interfacing with a system, such as speech, touch, type and more.
The book will discuss the new world of mobile multimodality,
focusing on innovative technologies and design which create a
state-of-the-art user interface. It will examine the practical
challenges entailed in meeting commercial deployment goals, and
offer new approaches to the designing such interfaces. A multimodal
interface for mobile devices requires the integration of several
recognition technologies together with sophisticated user interface
and distinct tools for input and output of data. The book will
address the challenge of designing devices in a synergetic fashion
which does not burden the user or to create a technological
overload.
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