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Intro -- Thee Event -- About the Author -- Dedication -- Copyright Information © -- Acknowledgement -- Chapter 1 Miami, FL -- Chapter 2 6 Months Earlier in Albany, NY… -- Chapter 3 Present Day… -- Chapter 4 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Chapter 10 -- Chapter 11 -- Chapter 12 -- Chapter 13 -- Chapter 14 -- Chapter 15 -- Chapter 16 -- Chapter 17 -- Chapter 18 -- Chapter 19 -- Chapter 20.
"Feeling anxious, powerless or confused about the future of our planet? This book will transform how you see our biggest environmental problems, and how we can solve them. We are bombarded by doomsday headlines that tell us the soil won't be able to support crops, fish will vanish from our oceans, that we should reconsider having children. But in this bold, radically hopeful book, data scientist Hannah Ritchie argues that if we zoom out, a very different picture emerges. The data shows we've made so much progress on these problems, and so fast, that we could be on track to achieve true sustainability for the first time in history. Packed with the latest research, practical guidance and enlightening graphics, this book will make you rethink almost everything you've been told about the environment, from the virtues of eating locally and living in the countryside, to the evils of overpopulation, plastic straws and palm oil. It will give you the tools to understand what works, what doesn't and what we urgently need to focus on so we can leave a sustainable planet for future generations. These problems are big. But they are solvable. We are not doomed. We can build a better future for everyone. Let's turn that opportunity into reality"--Publisher's description
In: Very short introductions 244
Donald A. Ritchie, a congressional historian for forty years , takes readers on a fascinating, behind-the-scenes tour of Capitol Hill, pointing out the key players, explaining their behavior, and translating parliamentary language into plain English. He also explores the essential necessity of compromise to accomplish anything significant in the legislative arena. However, recent events show that political polarization has hardened and produced gridlock, as Ritchieexplains in this new edition. The 2020 election also produced a more diverse membership in terms of gender, ethnicity, religion, and ideology, with primary elections resulting in the defeat of moderate candidates by opponents ranging from socialists on the left to conspiracy theorists on the right,making bipartisan compromise harder to achieve. Among the most significant events since the last edition, the Senate ignored President Obama's last nomination to the Supreme Court and then adopted a "nuclear option" to streamline future Supreme Court confirmations. The House also twice impeached President Trump, processes that starkly expose the differences between the majority-rule requirements of the House and the super-majority requirements of the Senate. This new edition explains how the parties have changed in light of the unprecedentedpolitics of the past four years, culminating in the mob attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, and how this development has affected both the House and the Senate
In: Critical Lives Ser
"Science is how we understand the world. Yet critical flaws in peer review, statistical methods, and publication procedures have rendered a shocking number of scientific studies useless-or worse, badly misleading. Drawing on surprising new data from "meta-science" (the science of how science works), Science Fictions documents the errors that have distorted our knowledge on issues as varied as cancer biology, nutrition, genetics, immigration, education, and extraterrestrial life. Stuart Ritchie's own work challenging an infamous psychology experiment helped spark what's now widely known as the "replication crisis," the realization that many supposed scientific truths cannot be relied upon. Now, he reveals the very human biases, mistakes, and deceptions that undermine the scientific endeavor: from contamination in science labs to the secret vaults of failed studies that nobody gets to see; from outright cheating with fake data to the more common but still ruinous temptation to exaggerate mediocre results for a shot at scientific fame. Yet Science Fictions is far from a counsel of despair. Rather, it's a defense of the scientific method against the pressures and perverse incentives that lead scientists to bend the rules. By illustrating the ways that science goes wrong, Ritchie gives us the knowledge we need to spot dubious research, and points the way to reforms that might save science from itself"--
Intro -- Adventures of a Ginger Kid -- About the Author -- Dedication -- Copyright Information © -- Acknowledgment -- Almost at the Beginning -- Infants School -- A Greenstick Facture in the Junior School -- Sports Day at Infants School -- Nativity at the Infants School -- The Corner Shop -- Walking to School -- Telegraph Poles -- The Train Journey -- Grandma Knows Best -- Learning to Swim -- Jigsaws -- What Is Mrs Brown Doing to Nathaniel? -- Tying Shoelaces -- Nursery -- Birthday Party -- The Two Peters -- Broken Leg (Someone Else's) -- Ballet, Tap, Brownies and All Things After School -- Bruce and the Suitcase -- Priory Park -- Trustee Savings Bank -- Fanny by Gaslight -- All Sorts of Anomalies -- Shopping with Grandma -- By the Seaside -- Independence Day in Boots -- Left and Right -- Bangers and Mash -- More Big Knickers.
In: Contending modernities
A populist moment -- Community organizing as inclusive populism -- Engaging the theoretical debate I : a critique of liberalism -- Community organizing : six challenges -- Integration, Islam, and immigration -- Engaging the theoretical debate II : traditions, pluralism, and populism -- Inclusive populism and the renewal of politics.
Using the conceptual framework of populism as discourse, Ritchie Savage provides a comparative analysis of U.S. and Latin American speeches and articles covering Betancourt's Acción Democrática, Chávez, McCarthyism, and the Tea Party. In so doing, he reveals an essential structure to populist discourse: reference to the "opposition" as a representation of the persistence of social conflict, posed against a collective memory of the origins of democracy and struggle for equality, is present in all cases. This discursive formation of populism is carried out in comparisons of political discourse in the United States and Venezuela, two countries that are typically classified as empirically specific in their economic and political development and ideological orientation. Populist Discourse in Venezuela and the United States explores how instances of populism, once exceptional phenomena within modern forms of political rule, are becoming increasingly integrated with the structure of democratic politics.--
In: Routledge studies in development economics 121
Exploring institutional complexity in a less formal context -- The ubiquity of institutions: shaping economic development -- Afghanistan : persisting instability, informality and tradition -- Transforming norms towards unlocking societal barriers -- Constructing institutions in enterprise -- Unwrapping agency: interests, power and networks -- Towards a dynamic and inter-disciplinary theory of institutional change
Aufgaben, Organisationsform, Ausbildung. Ausrüstung, Bezahlung und Rangordnung der kaiserlichen Wachen sowie die Garden der Kaiser vom 1. bis zum 4. Jahrhundert n.Chr. werden ausführlich beschrieben. Rezension: Nach einer Einleitung in Aufgaben, Organisationsform, Ausbildung und Ausrüstung sowie Bezahlung und Rangordnung der kaiserlichen Wachen führt der Autor ("Die Traianssäule in Rom", gleicher Verlag, 2012) detailliert die verschiedenen Garden der Kaiser vom 1. bis zum 4. Jahrhundert n.Chr. auf. Orientierung bieten zahlreiche Quellentexte von Cassius Dio bis Aurelian, eingebettet in einige Abbildungen von Münzen, Grabstelen, Mosaiken, aber auch Fotos von heute in Deutschland stattfindenden Römerfestspielen. Interessant: Die Bilder von Reliefs sind nachkoloriert, um eine gröt︢mögliche Anschaulichkeit zu gewährleisten. Der Archäologe Pogorzelski macht die historischen Zusammenhänge deutlich, die einigen Garden den Ruf von "Kaisermachern", anderen den Ruf von "Kaisermördern" einbrachten und gibt in einer Schlussbetrachtung das Bild des aktuellen Forschungsstands wieder. Das letzte Werk zum Thema ist 20 Jahre alt ("Die Prätorianer" von Hans D. Stöver, 1995). Mit Glossar und Literaturhinweisen. (2)
Many contemporary Anglo-American philosophers describe themselves as naturalists. But what do they mean by that term? Popular naturalist slogans like, ""there is no first philosophy"" or ""philosophy is continuous with the natural sciences"" are far from illuminating. ""Understanding Naturalism"" provides a clear and readable survey of the main strands in recent naturalist thought. The origin and development of naturalist ideas in epistemology, metaphysics and semantics is explained through the works of Quine, Goldman, Kuhn, Chalmers, Papineau, Millikan and others. The most common objections t