Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Alternativ können Sie versuchen, selbst über Ihren lokalen Bibliothekskatalog auf das gewünschte Dokument zuzugreifen.
Bei Zugriffsproblemen kontaktieren Sie uns gern.
4427 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
The concept of regions, segments of the Earth's surface, and the process of regionalization, identifying regions, are potentially useful but in need of reexamination. The meaning of 'region', the nature of regions, and the conventionality of existing regions are the main issues addressed.Our understanding of the world is heavily influenced by conventional geographies. Humans naturally break the world into classes to understand it, including subdividing the Earth into regions. Regions can be studied directly, but are used mostly to identify the setting of events and experience. At the global scale, we primarily use countries. Additionally, geography, area studies, and other fields are increasingly organized around world regions. The convention that defines these regionalizations and by which we employ them has left the public and even social scientists operating in a mental world at odds with empirical reality.The conventional understanding of regions is that they are or should be standardized, authoritative or official, exhaustive and exclusive, hierarchical, and bounded. The conventional global regionalizations possess all five properties, and all are problematic. Also critiqued here are the distinction between formal and functional regions, the newer preference for process geographies over trait geographies, and the privileged status of place.Our substitute for conventional regions should primarily be regions defined by single, empirical attributes of the human, natural, or physical world, attributes most relevant to the subject under consideration; this will produce multiple independent systems of regions, in which regions, and regionalizations, will be parallel, occupying the same space. Examined carefully here are political regionalization, considering the juridical state, sovereignty, and territoriality in international relations, and linguistic regionalization, considering the identification of languages versus dialects, and Ethnologue. World regions at their best point to numerous geographically-concentrated commonalities, often linked to an original civilization and spread through religion or empire; these can be taken simultaneously to define a superregion, comprising a core where all commonalities are present, and a periphery where only one is. South Asia and Latin America are considered briefly as possible superregions; East Asia is considered in detail, with the culture of China as its base.
BASE
In: Black women, gender & families, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 23
ISSN: 1944-6462
Cover -- Additional Praise for between mother & -- daughter -- Copyrights -- Dedication -- Contents -- Foreword by Carmen Renee Berry -- Two Voices - Two Viewpoints -- Part 1: Staying Connected -- 1. Roots to Support Her and Wings to Fly -- 2. Your Evolving Relationship -- 3. Responsible Freedom and Positive Limits -- 4. Talking about Difficult Subjects -- 5. Healing Your Relationship -- 6. Trust Is Where It's At! -- 7. Courage, Brains, and Heart -- 8. Avoiding Guilt Trips -- 9. Escaping Humdrum -- Part 2: Rolling with the Punches -- 10. Quarreling -- 11. Driving and Other Rites of Passage -- 12. Clothes and Costumes -- 13. Body Piercing, Tattoos, and Other Desires for Adventure -- 14. I've Got Legs! Body Image and Eating Disorders -- 15. Bring on the Boys -- 16. Getting High -- 17. Privacy, Solitude, and Space -- 18. Mom Embarrassment: How Could She Do That! -- 19. Role Reveresal -- 20. The Blues: Daughter's Down Days -- Part 3: Flying into the Future -- 21. Finding Your Passion -- 22. Legacy of Love -- 23. A New Spin on an Old Struggle -- Afterword by Mavis Gruver -- Resource Guide -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Books by Judy Ford -- About New Moon Publishing -- Conari Press -- Backcover.
Vol. 1: 1833-1899. - revised edition. - 1970. - XXII,166 S. - ISBN 0-7165-0574-6; Vol. 2: 1955-1964. - 1970. - 128 S. - ISBN 0-7165-0884-2
World Affairs Online
In: Parliamentary papers series
In: Economica, Band 19, Heft 74, S. 229
In: A BK business book