|
|
Showing 1 - 25 of
26 matches in All Departments
James Vincent Conran (1899-1970) was the most significant political
organizer in the history of rural America. Conran served as a rural
Missouri prosecutor for 32 years, but he was also the much sought
political friend of statewide and national candidates such as
President Harry S. Truman, U.S. Senator Thomas F. Eagleton, and
Governor Warren Hearnes. Conran was heavily involved in state and
national Democratic Party politics his entire adult life.
Contemporary media depictions tended to portray Conran as a
traditional, corrupt political boss, like Conran's notorious
contemporaries, Tom Pendergast of Kansas City or Ed Crump of
Memphis. In J.V. Conran and Rural Political Power Will Sarvis
paints a more accurate image of Conran by describing both the
extent and limitations of his power and influence. Conran's
singular political influence is inextricably linked to the unique
demographics of his home region, the Missouri Bootheel. During the
early and mid 20th century, masses of black and white
sharecroppers, tenant farmers, and day laborers flocked into the
area from the Deep South creating a unique community that was part
southern, part midwestern, and part frontier.African Americans
enjoyed unusual political power, not simply in enfranchisement, but
also in organized bloc voting that sometimes won them quid pro quo
rewards for their segregated communities.
Focusing on the Asia-Pacific region, which in recent years has been
the engine of global economic growth , this volume surveys trends
and prospects in technical and vocational education and training
(TVET) with particular reference to achieving inclusive growth and
the greening of economies. Underlying the increasing pressure for
new models of TVET provision is the rapid pace of technological
change, demand for a work force which is highly responsive to
evolving needs and a transforming market place that calls for
higher order skills and lifelong learning. The book proposes a
re-engineered, modernized TVET system that fosters an innovative
approach which enhances the employability of workers as well as the
sustainability of their livelihoods. The book includes
contributions from leading policy makers, researchers, and
practitioners, including those in the private sector in analyzing
and forecasting the most urgent priorities in skills development.
The book argues for creative approaches to TVET design and delivery
particularly with a view to improve job prospects , and meeting the
goals of inclusion, sustainable development and social cohesion.
Addressing issues such as the chronic mismatches between skills
acquired and actual skills required in the work place, the volume
proposes diversified approaches towards workforce development and
partnerships with the private sector to improve the quality and
relevance of skills development . The new imperatives created by
'greening' economies and responses required in skills development
and training are addressed. Developing TVET is a high priority for
governments in the Asia Pacific region as they seek to achieve
long-term sustainable growth since the .continued success of their
economic destinies depend on it. The volume also includes an
emerging framework for skills development for inclusive and
sustainable growth in the Asia and Pacific region.
Focusing on the Asia-Pacific region, which in recent years has been
the engine of global economic growth , this volume surveys trends
and prospects in technical and vocational education and training
(TVET) with particular reference to achieving inclusive growth and
the greening of economies. Underlying the increasing pressure for
new models of TVET provision is the rapid pace of technological
change, demand for a work force which is highly responsive to
evolving needs and a transforming market place that calls for
higher order skills and lifelong learning. The book proposes a
re-engineered, modernized TVET system that fosters an innovative
approach which enhances the employability of workers as well as the
sustainability of their livelihoods. The book includes
contributions from leading policy makers, researchers, and
practitioners, including those in the private sector in analyzing
and forecasting the most urgent priorities in skills development.
The book argues for creative approaches to TVET design and delivery
particularly with a view to improve job prospects , and meeting the
goals of inclusion, sustainable development and social cohesion.
Addressing issues such as the chronic mismatches between skills
acquired and actual skills required in the work place, the volume
proposes diversified approaches towards workforce development and
partnerships with the private sector to improve the quality and
relevance of skills development . The new imperatives created by
'greening' economies and responses required in skills development
and training are addressed. Developing TVET is a high priority for
governments in the Asia Pacific region as they seek to achieve
long-term sustainable growth since the .continued success of their
economic destinies depend on it. The volume also includes an
emerging framework for skills development for inclusive and
sustainable growth in the Asia and Pacific region.
|
Devi
Will Sarvis
|
R434
Discovery Miles 4 340
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
"Pesto and Caesar danced to the same beat. They wouldn't eat
anything that wasn't sweet." When the corner store moved and Caesar
the mouse couldn't get sweets anymore, both Pesto and Caesar were
forced to eat healthier food. What a surprise, to learn that they
loved the taste of fruits and vegetables. "Pesto and Caesar
continue to eat healthier food. I saw them yesterday looking fit
and trim skipping to the kitchen. They were in a very good mood."
Too Many Feathers is a children's picture book about sharing and
recycling. Many Feathers the main character of the story, has too
many feathers. He flies around his neighborhood shedding his
unwanted feathers. All of his friends find and recycle them in a
creative and productive way.
The highland forests of southwestern Virginia were a sacred land to
Native Americans and one they relied upon for sustenance. After
European contact, this beautiful country drew successive waves of
settlers and visitors, and for a brief yet intense period,
industrialists rapaciously exploited its timber resources,
particularly in the higher elevations where the woodlands had
survived the nearby valleys' generations of agricultural use. This
is the story of how various peoples have regarded this land over
the centuries and how, starting in the early twentieth century, the
federal government acquired 700,000 acres of it to create what is
now the Jefferson National Forest (JNF). Will Sarvis's in-depth
history explores the area's significance to such native tribes as
the Cherokee and Shawnee, for whom it functioned as a buffer zone
in late prehistory, and its attraction for nineteenth-century
romantics who, arriving in stagecoaches, became the area's first
tourists. Aggressive commercial logging gave way to the arrival of
the U.S. Forest Service, which patched the JNF together through
successive purchases of privately owned land and instituted a more
regulated harvesting of various timber resources. Public support
for Forest Service policy during the Depression and World War II
was followed by controversies, including the use of eminent domain.
In presenting this history, Sarvis probes the many complexities of
land stewardship and, in analysis that is sure to spark debate,
discusses how and why the JNF could abandon clear-cutting and
return to traditional selective tree management. An ongoing
experiment in democratic land use, the JNF contains many lessons
about our relationship with the natural environment. This book
delineates those lessons in a clear and compelling narrative that
will be of great interest to policy makers, activists, and indeed
anyone drawn to American environmental history and Appalachian
studies.
This book addresses urban ecology, green technology, problems with
climate change prediction, groundwater contamination, invasive
species and many others topics, and offers a guardedly optimistic
interpretation of humanity's place in nature and our unique
caretaker role. Drawing upon scholarly and media sources, the
author presents a common-sense analysis of environmental science,
debunking eco-apocalyptic thinking along the way. Compromised
science masquerading as authoritative is revealed as a fundraising
and policy-influencing crusade by the environmental elite,
overshadowing unambiguous problems like environmental racism.
|
You may like...
Notes On Grief
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Hardcover
(1)
R404
R275
Discovery Miles 2 750
New Times
Rehana Rossouw
Paperback
(1)
R280
R259
Discovery Miles 2 590
|