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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
This book offers a unique multi-generational approach to saving
Social Security. Public programs have adapted to societal aging,
but fears overwhelm hopes for Social Security's future prospects.
Conservatives want to privatize operations that liberals seek to
expand. Younger workers are happy that Social Security protects
their elders, but most do not expect benefits when needed.
Achenbaum reframes conflicting perspectives and offers new models
of respectful transgenerational dialogue that can mobilize
pragmatic reforms. Designed for use in gerontology, social work,
and public-policy courses, Safeguarding Social Security for Future
Generations offers measured hope for leaving a legacy that
safeguards the common good.
This insightful study explores how a small state with limited
economic resources has played an important role in vital, ongoing
Middle Eastern political and security controversies. Global
Security Watch—Jordan provides readers with an expert,
comprehensive overview of significant aspects of Jordan's security,
including its political, diplomatic, and alliance-building
dimensions. Examining how Jordan emerged from a small Arab kingdom
with arbitrary borders and no clear national identity to a
confident and modernizing state, the book shows how today's nation
effectively copes with a variety of geopolitical challenges.
Jordan's close relations with the United States are examined, with
special attention paid to ongoing U.S.-Jordanian cooperation in
fighting al-Qaeda and its terrorist allies. The work also probes
Jordan's involvement in many of the great conflicts in the
contemporary Middle East, for example, that between the Israelis
and Palestinians, clarifying Jordanian policies, while helping the
reader understand many of the regional problems Jordan finds itself
forced to address.
This book offers a unique multi-generational approach to saving
Social Security. Public programs have adapted to societal aging,
but fears overwhelm hopes for Social Security's future prospects.
Conservatives want to privatize operations that liberals seek to
expand. Younger workers are happy that Social Security protects
their elders, but most do not expect benefits when needed.
Achenbaum reframes conflicting perspectives and offers new models
of respectful transgenerational dialogue that can mobilize
pragmatic reforms. Designed for use in gerontology, social work,
and public-policy courses, Safeguarding Social Security for Future
Generations offers measured hope for leaving a legacy that
safeguards the common good.
Has anyone today any conception of the grandeur, the extent, the
million board feet a day production...the entire meaning of the
forests of the Pacific Northwest-the "Big Woods"? The photographs
alone in this absorbing book will instantly transport the reader
into this former world. Here was the greatest stand of Douglas fir
timber in existence and here was labor for the Poles, Finns, Swedes
and Norskies lured out of the Midwest to convert the mammoth trees
into the lumber that helped build the West Coast cities. Ralph
Andrews presents a fascinating subject-the hope, courage and
tragedy in the lives of the men and women who opened up the dense
native forests or as the loggers said "brought daylight into the
swamp," and converted the trees into the lumber which built the
West Coast cities. Here are many nostalgic scenes showing high
climbers, fallers balanced on high springboards, yokes of oxen and
up to eight spans of horses dragging logs on skidroad, yokes of
oxen and up to eight spans of horses dragging logs on skidroads to
flumes, rivers and salt water, early donkey engines, railroads on
steep grades, logging camps as well as devastating fires. Andrews'
style of writing is graphic and spirited with strong emphasis on
human interest.
* Provides much-needed perspective on parenting in low- and
middle-income countries, where the majority of parenting research
still focuses on WEIRD (Western, educated, industrialized, rich,
democratic) countries. * Compares data about four specific domains
of parenting (Caregiving, Discipline, Environment and Public
Health) in relation to development in children 1-5 years of age in
more than 50 countries, advancing knowledge of both parenting and
child development in diverse LMIC contexts. * The book is timely
and particularly needed as researchers and practitioners
increasingly emphasize the importance of understanding how
parenting and child development are influenced by cultural contexts
* Provides much-needed perspective on parenting in low- and
middle-income countries, where the majority of parenting research
still focuses on WEIRD (Western, educated, industrialized, rich,
democratic) countries. * Compares data about four specific domains
of parenting (Caregiving, Discipline, Environment and Public
Health) in relation to development in children 1-5 years of age in
more than 50 countries, advancing knowledge of both parenting and
child development in diverse LMIC contexts. * The book is timely
and particularly needed as researchers and practitioners
increasingly emphasize the importance of understanding how
parenting and child development are influenced by cultural contexts
As Christians, each of us is called to bring people together
through the Spirit of God. By developing our inner character--our
heart--we can have a greater role in other people's lives, and
others can have more significance in our own growth as leaders.
Genuine influence is a deep summons to our most authentic
selves--an exciting exploration that is often missing in our
culture of quick fixes and easy advice. In The Influential
Christian, Michael W. Andrews reveals how engaging in spiritual
practices that exercise empathy allows us to cultivate influence in
our personal, professional, and spiritual lives. Drawing upon God's
spiritual resources as we interact with other people, we build the
integrity necessary to be empathic leaders. As readers will
discover, building character is much more than completing a
checklist of self-improvement initiatives--it's a pilgrimage into
the full meaning of being human and being Christian.
This vital volume advances understanding of how parenting from
childhood to adolescence changes or remains the same in a variety
of sociodemographic, psychological, and cultural contexts,
providing a truly global understanding of parenting across
cultures. Through the Parenting Across Cultures project, the
editors unveil findings from this hugely important comparative
longitudinal study of parents and children in China, Colombia,
Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the
United States. The volume offers insight into trajectories of
parenting, exploring parents' warmth, control, rules setting, and
knowledge of children's activities and whereabouts. Each chapter is
authored by a contributor native to the country examined,
guaranteeing an authentic emic perspective, and together the
chapters provide a broader sample that is more generalizable to a
wider range of the world's population than is typical in most
parenting research. Parenting Across Cultures From Childhood to
Adolescence is essential reading for researchers and students of
parenting, psychology, human development, family studies,
sociology, and cultural anthropology, as well as professionals
working with families.
Research on the processes of change during the transition from
middle childhood to adolescence has been a relatively neglected
area of scholarship until recently. This volume, features prominent
researchers who provide integrative accounts of their research
programs, focusing on processes of physical, social, and cognitive
change during this important transition period in development. Also
included in this volume is an overview, discussion, and critical
analysis of core conceptual issues in the study of adolescent
transition.
Partnerships among a variety of institutions - for profit,
not-for-profit, and non-profit - are a relatively recent
organizational development. Such partnerships link businesses,
government, and social agencies. The primary reason for these
relationships is to achieve goals sooner and more efficiently by
building on the resources and expertise of each partner. In arts
education, schools, arts organizations, cultural institutions,
government agencies, and universities have engaged in joint
ventures to improve the teaching and learning of the arts
disciplines in their schools and in their communities. These
partnerships have been particularly beneficial for teachers, many
of whom have limited background in the arts but are expected to
teach them in their classrooms. Arts partnerships initially focused
on the goals of the participating organizations; that is, to
develop artistic skills, to build future audiences, and/or to
encourage young people to consider an artistic career. More
recently, partnerships focus on educational goals rather than
solely artistic ones. Despite the challenges and complexities of
arts education partnerships, most partners believe that the
benefits to students, teachers and the community outweigh the
disadvantages and consequently, as the research in Working Together
demonstrates, they are willing to justify the time, energy, and
expense involved to improve the quality of arts education.
Research on the processes of change during the transition from
middle childhood to adolescence has been a relatively neglected
area of scholarship until recently. This volume, features prominent
researchers who provide integrative accounts of their research
programs, focusing on processes of physical, social, and cognitive
change during this important transition period in development. Also
included in this volume is an overview, discussion, and critical
analysis of core conceptual issues in the study of adolescent
transition.
As Christians, each of us is called to bring people together
through the Spirit of God. By developing our inner character-our
heart-we can have a greater role in other people's lives, and
others can have more significance in our own growth as leaders.
Genuine influence is a deep summons to our most authentic selves-an
exciting exploration that is often missing in our culture of quick
fixes and easy advice. In The Influential Christian, Michael
Andrews reveals how engaging in spiritual practices that exercise
empathy allows us to cultivate influence in our personal,
professional, and spiritual lives. Drawing upon God's spiritual
resources as we interact with other people, we build the integrity
necessary to be empathic leaders. As readers will discover,
building character is much more than completing a checklist of
self-improvement initiatives-it's a pilgrimage into the full
meaning of being human and being Christian.
Following an introduction that outlines the history and projects
the future of gerontology, the authors offer insightful profiles of
roughly 300 researchers, teachers, and practitioners in aging.
North Americans are heavily represented, though gerontologists from
Great Britain and the Continent are included as well. The
dictionary can be read for an overview of the field, while
cross-listings and a complete name and subject index make it an
ideal reference. Each entry contains a professional and academic
biography, along with citations and succinct descriptions of the
individual's important contributions to the study of the elderly
and aging.
Product information not available.
Focusing on the process of agricultural policy-making within the
Caribbean Community and Common Market, this book provides a context
for understanding the evolving theory of regional integration among
developing countries. It traces the progress of Caribbean
integration from its beginnings.
The reissue of this classic history allows us to once again journey
into the past and rediscover for the first time the forgotten men
and methods of logging history in the Northwest United States and
Canada. This book contain the best photographs of a dozen famous
collections: Davis and Benson rafts, river drives, hand logging
spar topping big wheels in the pine, saw mills of 1890 to 1915,
historical ox teams, tractors, blumes. In this chronicle of the Big
Woods, bunk house ballads, humorous sketches and eyewitness
accounts of work and life in the tall uncut as well as the rich
photographs help the reader to actually feel the old logging
atmosphere.
A critical gerontology requires more than a simple elaboration
of existing humanistic scholarship on aging. This exceptional new
work introduces a basis for genuine dialogue across humanistic,
scientific, and professional disciplines. Among the topics
addressed are industrial employment, retirement, life styles of
older women, and biological research. From philosophical
reflections on the "third age" to critical perspectives on
institutional adaptations to an aging society, this book presents a
wide range of provocative thought.
"Someday" Big Fred Hewett used to say in his Humboldt Saloon in
Aberdeen, Washington, "these pictures will show how the boys used
to do it." He knew the day would come when the Pacific Northwest's
"Big Woods" would be only a fog-blurred memory and the cry "Logs!
More Logs!" would no longer be heard ringing up and down the
skidroads. With the superb views of timber photographer Darius
Kinsey, comprising more than 200 pictures made from wet plate
celluloid negatives, 11" x 14", and processed by his pioneer wife,
Tabitha, author Andrews dramatically presents a panorama of
lumbering's great days in these woods from 1890 to 1925. Shown in
sharp detail are the first axes, 12-foot crosscut saws, the first
oxen and horses, the first donkey engines and "lokeys". Then the
story continues into the "highball" days, the high production
period with the steel tower skidders and miles of steel rigging.
The volume's topic was chosen in part because of the rapidly
growing salience of dyadic research perspectives in developmental
psychology, but also in social psychology and in fields such as
communication and family studies. It provides the most complete
representation now available on current theory and research on the
significance of personal relationships in child and adolescent
development. This volume addresses the ways in which the study of
social development has been altered by an emphasis on research
questions and techniques for studying children and adolescents in
the context of their significant dyadic relationships. Leading
scholars--many of them pioneers in the concepts and methods of
dyadic research--have contributed chapters in which they both
report findings from recent research and reflect on the
implications for developmental psychology. Their work encompasses
studies of relationships with parents, siblings, friends, and
romantic partners. Opening chapters set the stage by describing the
key characteristics of social-development research from a dyadic
perspective and outlining key themes and contemporary issues in the
field. It concludes with commentaries from distinguished senior
scholars identifying important directions for future
research.
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