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Amulet (Paperback)
Frederick Westley and a H Davi Company
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R523
Discovery Miles 5 230
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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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.
If you have ever wanted to know what impact your support for
mission has, this book is for you. This series of letters home to
supporters shows the deep relationship of care and love that grows
between the missionary and their supporters and how supporters are
in fact a vital link in the missionary's team. The writer is a
pilot with Mission Aviation Fellowship, a Christian charity that
has served people in some of the most remote and inhospitable areas
of the world for over 60 years now and is a fascinating insight
into the world of aviation, mission and teamwork.
Boxes full of money in the trunk of the car, suitcases filled with
fresh twenty-dollar bills, assassination plots against President
John F. Kennedy and against his brother Bobby, then Attorney
General of the United States, deals with the New Orleans mob, arms
deals with Fidel Castro, fake passports and Mexican IDs, contracts
on the lives of any who dared to oppose, violence against companies
that refused to cooperate with union organizers, secret testimony
against union boss Jimmy Hoffa, criminal indictments, trials,
convictions and imprisonment ... these are all part of the story
told by Douglas Wesley Partin, younger brother of Edward Grady
Partin, ruthless boss of Teamsters Local #5 in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, for thirty years. Doug witnessed it all from the shadow
of his older brother, and then he stepped in, succeeded his brother
as principal officer of Teamsters Local #5, cleaned it up and led
it for many more years. This is a story for the ages.
At a time when governments and civil society organizations are
putting ever-greater stock in social innovation as a route to
transformation, understanding what characterizes social innovation
with transformative potential is important. Exciting and promising
ideas seem to die out as often as they take flight, and market
mechanisms, which go a long way towards contributing to successful
technical innovations, play an insignificant role in social
innovations. The cases in this book explore the evolution of
successful social innovation through time, from the ideas which
catalyzed social and system entrepreneurs to create new processes,
platforms, projects, and programs to fundamental social shifts in
culture, economics, laws, and policies which occurred as a result.
In doing so, the authors shed light on how to recognize
transformative potential in the early stage innovations we see
today. This comparison of multiple historical cases across problem
domains creates a map of social innovation over time - shifting our
thinking on both current issues and established programmes. From
the American national parks and the joint stock company to the
intelligence test and the financial derivatives that led to the
2008 crash, this book acts as a useful reflection and a cautionary
tale, looking back to gain insight and inform the vibrant
discussion of social innovation's future. This book pushes
theoretical and methodological boundaries of the field through
approachable narratives, making it an ideal resource for social
innovation students, scholars, instructors, and practitioners.
Contributors include: E. Alexiuk, N. Antadze, J. Blacklock, S.
Geobey, D. McCarthy, K. McGowan, M.-L. Moore, P. Olsson, O.
Tjornbo, F. Westley
A detailed investigation into the mysterious group of monks, the
Celi De, who flourished in early medieval Ireland. The Celi De
[`clients of God'], sometimes referred to as the Culdees, comprise
the group of monks who first appeared in Ireland in the eighth
century in association with St Mael Ruain of Tallaght. Although
influential and important in the development of the monastic
tradition in Ireland, they have been neglected in general
histories. This book offers an investigation into the movement.
Proceeding from an examination of ascetic practice and theory in
earlymedieval Ireland, followed by a fresh look at the evidence
most often cited in support of the prevailing theory of celi De
identity, the author challenges the orthodox opinion that they were
an order or movement intent uponmonastic reform at a time of
declining religious discipline. At the heart of the book is a
manuscript-centred critical evaluation of the large corpus of
putative celi De texts, offered as a means for establishing a more
comprehensive assessment of who and what celi De were. Dr Follett
argues that they are properly understood as the self-identified
members of the personal retinue of God, in whose service they
distinguished themselves from other monks and monastic communities
in their personal devotion, pastoral care, Sunday observance, and
other matters. A catalogue of celi De texts with manuscript
references is provided in an appendix. WESTLEY FOLLETT is Assistant
Professor of History at the University of Southern Mississippi.
This collection of essays will stimulate the use of ionophores in
different research areas. It includes information on potential
breakthroughs in the halogenated derivatives of lasalocid and
ethers of antibiotic A204A, polyethers and analytical techniques
used to unravel their complex structures.
This collection of essays will stimulate the use of ionophores in
different research areas. It includes information on potential
breakthroughs in the halogenated derivatives of lasalocid and
ethers of antibiotic A204A, polyethers and analytical techniques
used to unravel their complex structures.
This book aims to examine how the pattern of growth in the
agricultural sectors has contributed to equitable growth and to
assess the relevance of the relationship between agriculture and
equitable growth in Punjab-Haryana for other states in India and
for other low-income countries.
Contents: Dilts, Series Introduction. McCance-Katz, Clark, Book Introduction. Larimer, Palmer, Marlatt, Relapse Prevention: An Overview of Marlatt's Cognitive-behavioral Model. Noonan, Moyers, Motivational Interviewing. Carroll, Libby, Sheehan, Hyland, Motivational Interviewing to Enhance Treatment Initiation in Substance Abusers: An Effectiveness Study. Gallanter, Dermatis, Keller, Trujillo, Network Therapy for Cocaine Abuse: Use of Family and Peer Support. Miller, Meyers, Hiller-Sturmhofel, The Community Reinforcement Approach. Higgins, Alessi, Dantona, Voucher-based Incentives: A Substance Abuse Treatment Innovation. Rawson, Huber, McCann, Shoptaw, Farabee, Reiber, Ling, A Comparison of Contingency Management and Cognitive-behavior Approaches during Methadone Maintenance Treatment for Cocaine Dependence. Westermeyer, Myott, Aarts, Thuras, Self-help Strategies among Patients with Substance Abuse Disorders. Kasprow, Rosenheck, Frisman, DeLella, Residential Treatment for Dually Diagnosed Homeless Veterans: A Comparison of Program Types. Kaminer, Burleson, Psychotherpies for Adolescent Substance Abusers: 15-Month Follow-up of a Pilot Study. Martin, The Links between Alcohol, Crime and the Criminal Justice System: Explanations, Evidence, and Interventions.
Specifying those conditions under which low-income countries might
be able to achieve equitable growth and reduce mass poverty is a
major issue in development theory and policy. Given the
preponderant role of the agricultural sector as a source of income
and employment in the early stages of development, it is not
surprising that much of the theorizing about equitable growth is
concentrated on the relationship between agricultural growth and
poverty reduction. The adjacent Indian states of Punjab and Haryana
have been remarkably successful in achieving rapid agricultural
growth and in reducing significantly the proportion of the
population below the poverty line. The author uses the case of
Punjab-Haryana to test two competing theories of equitable growth:
the idea that a "sectoral shift" toward agriculture must be a key
component in planning and the converse approach that shifts in
agricultural policies, programs, and investments will be
ineffective in reducing poverty unless accompanied by a major
"structural shift" toward a more equal distribution of land and a
more broadly based control of the institutions supporting
agriculture. The experience of Punjab-Haryana generally suggests
that the rural bias of agricultural policies and programs despite
the absence of a structural shift in land ownership has reduced
rural poverty.
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