Vores kunder ligger øverst på Google

Google Ads Specialister fra Vestjylland

Vi er 100% dedikerede til Google Annoncering – Vi har mange års erfaring med Google Ads og den bruger vi på at opsætte, optimere & vedligeholde vores fantastiske kunders konti.

100% Specialiseret i Google Ads
Vi har mange års erfaring fra +300 konti
Ingen lange bindinger & evighedskontrakter
Jævnlig opfølgning med hver enkelt kunde
Vi tager din virksomhed seriøst

15 results (0,18666 seconds)

Brand

Merchant

Price (EUR)

Reset filter

Products
From
Shops

Frameworks of Time in Rousseau

Multinationals and European Integration Trade Investment and Regional Development

Climate Change and Journalism Negotiating Rifts of Time

Mongolia Today

Innovative Behavior of Minorities Women and Immigrants

Migrant Narratives Storytelling as Agency Belonging and Community

Resettlement with People First Counterfactual Pathways

Resettlement with People First Counterfactual Pathways

Should people in the way lose out as new reservoirs mines plantations or superhighways displace them from their homes and livelihoods? What if the process of resettlement were made accountable to those impacted empowering them to achieve just outcomes and to share in the benefits of development projects? This book seeks to answer these questions putting forward powerful counterfactual case studies to assess what problems real-world development projects would likely have avoided if the project had included the affected people in decision making about whether and how they should resettle. Drawing on contributions from leading and emerging scholars from around the world this book considers cases involving dams mines roads and housing amongst others from Asia Africa and South America. In each case the counterfactual approach invites us to reconsider how the dynamics of accountability play out through resettlement hazards and the asymmetries of power relations in the negotiation of displacement benefits and redress. Considering a range of theoretical and ethical perspectives the book concludes with practical alternative policy suggestions for displacement arising both from development and from slow onset climate change. This book’s novel approach focussing on the people's agency in the dynamics of governance accountability and (dis)empowerment in development projects with displacement and resettlement will appeal to academic researchers development practitioners and policymakers. | Resettlement with People First Counterfactual Pathways

GBP 130.00
1

The Transition to Capitalism in Modern France Primitive Accumulation and Markets from the Old Regime to the post-WWII Era

The Transition to Capitalism in Modern France Primitive Accumulation and Markets from the Old Regime to the post-WWII Era

Historians since the 1960s argue that the French economy performed as well as did any economy in Europe during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries thanks to the opportunities for profit available on the market especially the large consumer market in Paris. Whatever economic weaknesses existed did not stem from the social structure but from exogenous forces such as wars the lack of natural resources or slow demographic growth. This book challenges the foregoing consensus by showing that the French economy performed poorly relative to its rivals because of noncapitalist social relations. Specifically peasants and artisans controlled lands and workshops in autonomous communities and did not have to improve labor productivity to survive. Merchants and manufacturers cornered markets instead of being subject to the market’s competitive imperatives. Thus distinctive features of capitalism—primitive accumulation (the dispossession of peasants and artisans) and the competitive obligation faced by merchants and manufacturers to reinvest profits in order to keep the profits—did not prevail until the state imposed them in a process lasting for a century after the 1850s. For this reason it was not until the 1960s that France caught up to (and in some cases surpassed) its economic rivals. | The Transition to Capitalism in Modern France Primitive Accumulation and Markets from the Old Regime to the post-WWII Era

GBP 130.00
1

Engaging Faculty in Group-Level Change for Institutional Transformation Disrupting Inequity and Building Inclusive Academic Departments

Engaging Faculty in Group-Level Change for Institutional Transformation Disrupting Inequity and Building Inclusive Academic Departments

Diversifying the academic faculty remains an elusive goal marked by slow and uneven progress. This book describes an effective model for institutional transformation which is uniquely grounded in group-level processes. Efforts at institutional transformation continue to center individual actors. This is evident in the proliferation of programs that train individuals on implicit bias search strategies and other diversity and inclusion-based content as solutions for inequities in academia. Acknowledging the value of these approaches this book adds a new focus: group-level processes. It unifies research on gender and racial inequity with concepts from social psychological theories of group dynamics to present a model of change centered on professional adult learners including faculty and academic staff. The book details the implementation of group-level processes based on insights from the learning sciences higher education leadership communication studies and group facilitation to instill norms for a more equitable and inclusive institution. Drawing on quantitative and qualitative data to illustrate the impact of group-level initiatives the book offers recommendations to enable the application of this model in higher education contexts. This book will be of interest to researchers and graduate students studying institutional transformation academic social justice leadership and faculty professional development and to those interested in integrating justice and equity into team science translational research and other trans- inter- and multi-disciplinary fields. | Engaging Faculty in Group-Level Change for Institutional Transformation Disrupting Inequity and Building Inclusive Academic Departments

GBP 120.00
1

Personal Safety for Health Care Workers

Personal Safety for Health Care Workers

This book is aimed at employers managers and professional and administrative staff in the health care services. GP practices home visits and the hospital are all covered. Despite growing evidence of violence against health care workers some employers have been slow to acknowledge the risks faced in both primary and secondary health care settings. Personal Safety for Health Care Workers provides the tools to investigate the risks involved and to develop policy and practice to ensure staff safety. It also deals with the vexed question of under-reporting. Part I deals with the respective roles and responsibilities of employers and employees and offers guidance on developing a workplace personal safety policy. Workplace design and management are addressed and guidelines provided for health care workers when away from their normal work base. Part 2 gives detailed guidelines for use by individual workers in a variety of work situations. Part 3 considers training issues and contains a number of sample training programmes with handouts. The message of this book is that prevention is better than cure - proper attention to risk can reduce both the incidence of aggression and its development into violent acts. The aim is to achieve the dual effect of protecting health care workers and also of providing services in a more sensitive way. Good practice implies a responsibility to ensure that health care can be delivered in conditions of safety for staff and patients alike.

GBP 175.00
1

Distinctively American The Residential Liberal Arts Colleges

Distinctively American The Residential Liberal Arts Colleges

There is much change underway in American higher education. New technologies are challenging the teaching practices of yesterday distance learning is lauded and private firms offer to certify the educational credentials that businesses and others will deem satisfactory. In this new environment America's liberal arts colleges propound a quite different set of values. Their continuing faith in the liberal arts-not as the nineteenth century chose to define them but as the twenty-first century will be obliged to reconsider them-is being tested. Distinctively American examines the American liberal arts college as an institution from its role in the lives of students to its value as a form of education. It explores the threats faced by liberal arts colleges as well as the transformative role both positive and negative information technology will play in their future development and survival. In the preface introducing the volume Stephen Graubard examines the history of the American liberal arts colleges from their early disdained reputations in comparison to European schools to their slow rise to becoming world-class universities. This important volume explores the triumphs and challenges of one segment of the American higher educational universe. It also addresses a larger question: What ought this country be teaching its young the many millions who now throng its colleges and universities? Distinctively American is essential reading for all concerned with the future of higher education. | Distinctively American The Residential Liberal Arts Colleges

GBP 130.00
1

Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self The Production of Dwellspace

Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self The Production of Dwellspace

In Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self Les Roberts extends his earlier work on spatial anthropology to consider questions of time spaciousness and the phenomenology of self. Across the book’s four main chapters – which range from David Bowie’s long-standing interest in Buddhism to street photography of 1980s Liverpool to the ambient soundscapes of Derek Jarman’s Blue or to the slow contemplative cinema of Tsai Ming-Liang – Roberts lays the groundwork for the concept of ‘dwellspace’ as a means by which to unpick the shifting spatial temporal and experiential modalities of everyday mediascapes. Understood as a particular disposition towards time Roberts’s foray into dwellspace proceeds from a Pascalian reflection on the self/non-self in which being content in an empty room vies with the demands of having content in an empty room. Taking the idea of posthuman Buddhism as a heuristic lens Roberts sets in motion a number of interrelated lines of enquiry that prompt renewed focus on questions of boredom distraction and reverie and cast into sharper relief the psychosocial and creative affordances of ambience spaciousness and slowness. The book argues that the colonisation of ‘empty time’ by 24/7 digital capitalism has gone hand-in-hand with the growth of the corporate mindfulness industry and with it the co-option commodification and digitisation of dwellspace. Posthuman Buddhism is thus in part an exploration of the dialectics of dwellspace that orbits around a creative self-praxis rooted in the negation and dissolution of the self one of the foundational cornerstones of Buddhist theory and practice. | Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self The Production of Dwellspace

GBP 130.00
1

Ritual and Systems Thinking Managing an Initial Encounter

Ritual and Systems Thinking Managing an Initial Encounter

To many individuals and organisations situations generated by the world coronavirus pandemic have posed challenges and opportunities. We need to rethink how we interact with each other and with our natural environments. This book offers a way forward by proposing the use of rituals insight: semi-encoded patterns of thinking or actions to help us rebuild a sense of community which integrated with insights of applied systems thinking and in contrast to a dominant pragmatist orientation of thinking and action could help us further cope with work or education situations in which we still want to pursue our authenticity as human beings. This book offers ways to help make sense of how we could systemically and compassionately slow down and cope with work or education during and after the world coronavirus pandemic. It does so by integrating ideas about ritual with current research and practice on applied systems thinking. The author establishes a dialogue for co-existence between individuals and the knowledge disciplines of creativity and applied systems thinking using the mediation of rituals to help us appreciate our world with others. This conversation is much needed given our sense of uncertainty during and after the world coronavirus pandemic and the challenges or opportunities offered by hybrid work and education. Throughout the book the conversation explores new directions for research and practice beyond “futureaction” perspectives or orientations and the inclusion of electronically mediated spaces. The insights provided in this book offer a vital resource for management researchers and upper-level students particularly those researching and studying applied systems thinking and creativity. | Ritual and Systems Thinking Managing an Initial Encounter

GBP 130.00
1

Christ's Torah The Making of the New Testament in the Second Century

Christ's Torah The Making of the New Testament in the Second Century

This volume explores the creation of the collection now known as the New Testament. While it is generally accepted that it did not emerge as a collection prior to the late second century CE a more controversial question is how it came to be. How did the writings that make up the New Testament - The Gospels the so-called Praxapostolos (Acts and the canonical letters) the Epistles of Paul and Revelation - make their way into the collection and what do we know about their possible historical origins and in turn the emergence of the New Testament itself? The New Testament as we know it first became recognisable in more detail in Irenaeus of Lyon towards the end of the second century CE. However questions remain as to how and by whom was it redacted. Was it a slow organic process in which texts written by different authors members of different communities and in various places grew together into one book? Or were certain writings compiled on the basis of an editorial decision by an individual or a group of editors revised for this purpose and partly harmonised with each other? This volume sketches out the complex development of the New Testament arguing that key second century scholars played an important role in the emergence of the canonical collection and putting forward the possible historical origins of the text’s composition. Christ’s Torah: The Making of the New Testament in the Second Century is of interest to students and scholars working on the New Testament and anyone with an interest in early Christianity more broadly. | Christ's Torah The Making of the New Testament in the Second Century

GBP 130.00
1

Jews in Weimar Germany

Jews in Weimar Germany

The first comprehensive history of the German Jews on the eve of Hitler's seizure of power this book examines both their internal debates and their relations with larger German society. It shows that far from being united German Jewry was deeply divided along religious political and ideological fault lines. Above all the liberal majority of patriotic and assimilationist Jews was forced to sharpen its self-definition by the onslaught of Zionist zealots who denied the Germanness of the Jews. This struggle for the heart and soul of German Jewry was fought at every level affecting families synagogues and community institutions. Although the Jewish role in Germany's economy and culture was exaggerated they were certainly prominent in many fields giving rise to charges of privilege and domination. This volume probes the texture of German anti-Semitism distinguishing between traditional and radical Judeophobia and reaching conclusions that will give no comfort to those who assume that Germans were predisposed to become willing executioners under Hitler. It also assesses the quality of Jewish responses to racist attacks. The self-defense campaigns of the Central Association of German Citizens of the Jewish Faith included publishing counter-propaganda supporting sympathetic political parties and taking anti-Semitic demagogues to court. Although these measures could only slow the rise of Nazism after 1930 they demonstrate that German Jewry was anything but passive in its responses to the fascist challenge. The German Jews' faith in liberalism is sometimes attributed to self-delusion and wishful thinking. This volume argues that in fact German Jewry pursued a clear-sighted perception of Jewish self-interest apprehended the dangers confronting it and found allies in socialist and democratic elements that constituted the other Germany. Sadly this profound and genuine commitment to liberalism left the German Jews increasingly isolated as the majority of Germans turned to political radicalism in the last years of the Republic. This full-scale history of Weimar Jewry will be of interest to professors students and general readers interested in the Holocaust and Jewish History. | Jews in Weimar Germany

GBP 130.00
1