Sociology and anthropology Books

2531 products


  • On the Courthouse Lawn

    Beacon Press On the Courthouse Lawn

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    10 in stock

    £16.19

  • Prisons Make Us Safer And 20 Other Myths about

    Beacon Press Prisons Make Us Safer And 20 Other Myths about

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn accessible guide for activists, educators, and all who are interested in understanding how the prison system oppresses communities and harms individuals.The United States incarcerates more of its residents than any other nation. Though home to 5% of the global population, the United States has nearly 25% of the world’s prisoners—a total of over 2 million people. This number continues to steadily rise. Over the past 40 years, the number of people behind bars in the United States has increased by 500%.Journalist Victoria Law explains how racism and social control were the catalysts for mass incarceration and have continued to be its driving force: from the post-Civil War laws that states passed to imprison former slaves, to the laws passed under the “War Against Drugs” campaign that disproportionately imprison Black people. She breaks down these complicated issues into four main parts:    1. The rise and cause

    2 in stock

    £15.29

  • Women and Other Monsters Building a New Mythology

    Beacon Press Women and Other Monsters Building a New Mythology

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisA fresh cultural analysis of female monsters from Greek mythology, and an invitation for all women to reclaim these stories as inspiration for a more wild, more “monstrous” version of feminismThe folklore that has shaped our dominant culture teems with frightening female creatures. In our language, in our stories (many written by men), we underline the idea that women who step out of bounds—who are angry or greedy or ambitious, who are overtly sexual or not sexy enough—aren’t just outside the norm. They’re unnatural. Monstrous. But maybe, the traits we’ve been told make us dangerous and undesirable are actually our greatest strengths.Through fresh analysis of 11 female monsters, including Medusa, the Harpies, the Furies, and the Sphinx, Jess Zimmerman takes us on an illuminating feminist journey through mythology. She guides women (and others) to reexamine their relationships with traits like hunger, anger, ugliness, and

    10 in stock

    £20.40

  • One Drop

    Beacon Press One Drop

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisChallenges narrow perceptions of Blackness as both an identity and lived reality to understand the diversity of what it means to be Black in the US and around the worldWhat exactly is Blackness and what does it mean to be Black?Is Blackness a matter of biology or consciousness?Who determines who is Black and who is not?Who?s Black, who?s not, and who cares?In the United States, a Black person has come to be defined as any person with any known Black ancestry. Statutorily referred to as ?the rule of hypodescent,? this definition of Blackness is more popularly known as the ?one-drop rule,? meaning that a person with any trace of Black ancestry, however small or (in)visible, cannot be considered White. A method of social order that began almost immediately after the arrival of enslaved Africans in America, by 1910 it was the law in almost all southern states. At a time when the one-drop rule functioned to protect and preserve White racial purity, Blackness was both a matter of biology and the law. One was either Black or White. Period. Has the social and political landscape changed one hundred years later?One Drop explores the extent to which historical definitions of race continue to shape contemporary racial identities and lived experiences of racial difference. Featuring the perspectives of 60 contributors representing 25 countries and combining candid narratives with striking portraiture, this book provides living testimony to the diversity of Blackness. Although contributors use varying terms to self-identify, they all see themselves as part of the larger racial, cultural, and social group generally referred to as Black. They have all had their identity called into question simply because they do not fit neatly into the stereotypical ?Black box??dark skin, ?kinky? hair, broad nose, full lips, etc. Most have been asked ?What are you?? or the more politically correct ?Where are you from?? throughout their lives. It is through contributors? lived experiences with and lived imaginings of Black identity that we can visualize multiple possibilities for Blackness.

    10 in stock

    £24.30

  • We Are All FastFood Workers Now The Global

    Beacon Press We Are All FastFood Workers Now The Global

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe story of low-wage workers rising up around the world to demand respect and a living wage.Tracing a new labor movement sparked and sustained by low-wage workers from across the globe, “We Are All Fast-Food Workers Now” is an urgent, illuminating look at globalization as seen through the eyes of workers-activists: small farmers, fast-food servers, retail workers, hotel housekeepers, home-healthcare aides, airport workers, and adjunct professors who are fighting for respect, safety, and a living wage. With original photographs by Liz Cooke and drawing on interviews with activists in many US cities and countries around the world, including Bangladesh, Cambodia, Mexico, South Africa, and the Philippines, it features stories of resistance and rebellion, as well as reflections on hope and change as it rises from the bottom up.

    10 in stock

    £15.29

  • Emerging from Turbulence Boeing and Stories of

    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Emerging from Turbulence Boeing and Stories of

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisEmerging from Turbulence tells the stories of Boeing workers whose lives underwent dramatic shifts as a result of recent changes in the American economy. Workers' own words show the shifting landscape of the American workplace as pension funds evaporate, corporations buy each other out, and companies like Boeing stop seeing themselves as a family.Trade ReviewGrunberg and Moore—professors of comparative sociology and psychology, respectively—[present an] . . . insightful . . . book based on their two decades of research into Boeing's corporate culture. They emphasize changes that have occurred since 1997, when Boeing merged with another aerospace giant, McDonnell Douglas, and shifted from focusing on being a 'great engineering firm' to minimizing risk, pleasing shareholders, and achieving profits. The 'Boeing family' was no more; employees were told by the new president to 'quit behaving like a family and become more like a team. If you don't perform, you don't stay on the team.' The authors set out to chronicle this sweeping shift in one company's social contract using personal narratives from past and current employees, categorizing them by the timing and duration of their employ. Sub-categories include 'No Longer Family,' 'I Work to Live,' and 'Not What I Expected.' The workers'-eye-view is valuable. * Publishers Weekly *Boeing executives eager to inspire an engaged workforce might want to set aside their management books to study closely this account of what their employees think and feel. * The Seattle Times *Boeing's changes, sparked by a merger with rival McDonnell Douglas, included the relocation of work to cheaper places, the outsourcing of key components and aggressive cost cuts. These details, and conclusions drawn from them, form the basis of Emerging from Turbulence. . . .[Grunberg's] study . . . goes far beyond Boeing. It provides a view over two decades of the unwinding of the postwar social contract – where workers felt they could rely on decent pay and benefits in exchange for hard work. * Financial Times *Emerging from Turbulence offers compelling documentation of the unfolding effects of contemporary workplace transformations. In the tradition of Studs Terkel’s Working, the stories captured here resonate well beyond the iconic Boeing Company. This timely contribution will prompt serious reflection about what to expect of the workplace of the future. -- Linda Smircich, Isenberg School of Management, University of MassachusettsAn elegant, carefully crafted book, Emerging from Turbulence portrays the depth and scope of self-worth that people draw from the social relations and respect that they find at work. However, by comparing workers with different lengths of service, Grunberg and Moore document notably different changes in orientations toward work and the self when a ‘family’ company eliminates its community fabric and becomes a honed instrument of capitalism contributing to the increasingly stratified distribution of wealth in America. The book offers a comprehensive sense of how employees facing such change turn inward in seeking senses of personal value. -- Paul M. Roman, Regents' Professor of Sociology, Owens Institute for Behavioral Research, University of GeorgiaEmerging from Turbulence provides a voice for employees of Boeing following its merger with McDonnell Douglas in 1997. This book represents an example of what many employees across the country have gone through with such transitions to more lean production and how that transformation is experienced from the eyes and words of the employees. Grunberg and Moore are brave in depicting the psychological downfalls of transitioning from an employee-oriented company to a profit-focused company, but, more than anything, the book chronicles the impact of mergers and outsourcing on declines in employee commitment and loyalty, and represents how many US workplaces have moved towards more instrumental relationships with their workers. -- Leslie B. Hammer, Portland State UniversityTable of Contents1. Boeing’s Transformation and America’s New Social Contract Part I: Retired from Boeing 2. Heritage Boeing 3. No Longer Family Part II: Still Employed at Boeing 4. Still Family 5. I Work to Live 6. Permanently Scarred 7. Attached to Work, Detached from Company Part III: Newly Hired at Boeing 8. A Bright Future 9. A Second Career 10. Not What I Expected 11. Accepting the New Reality Part IV: Conclusion 12. Implications of the New Social Contract Appendix Notes Index

    10 in stock

    £30.00

  • 27 Wagons Full of Cotton and Other OneAct Plays

    New Directions Publishing Corporation 27 Wagons Full of Cotton and Other OneAct Plays

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe thirteen one-act plays collected in this volume include some of Tennessee Williams's finest and most powerful work.

    10 in stock

    £12.99

  • Tales from Tennessee Lawyers

    University Press of Kentucky Tales from Tennessee Lawyers

    Book Synopsis

    £19.00

  • Funeral Festivals in America Rituals for the

    The University Press of Kentucky Funeral Festivals in America Rituals for the

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThursby cites rituals for loved ones separated at the time of death, the frivolities surrounding death, funeral foods and feasts, post-funeral rites and ongoing commemorations, and many other facets of the American way of dealing with death.

    15 in stock

    £56.62

  • Real or Fake Studies in Authentication

    The University Press of Kentucky Real or Fake Studies in Authentication

    Book SynopsisJoe Nickell's latest book, Real or Fake, offers a general introduction to the principles of authentication. Nickell's extensive knowledge of the field is accessible to everyone -- from the general reader to the aspiring scientist -- who wants a better understanding of how the experts determine if a suspicious heirloom is real or fake.

    £40.46

  • Yes We Did From Kings Dream to Obamas Promise

    The University Press of Kentucky Yes We Did From Kings Dream to Obamas Promise

    20 in stock

    Book SynopsisShe emphasizes socioeconomic status, female black leadership, media influence, black conservatism, and generational conflict. Their personal accounts reflect the diverse viewpoints of the black community and offer a new understanding of the history of African American leadership, its current status, and its uncertain future.

    20 in stock

    £27.00

  • Ghosts of the Bluegrass

    The University Press of Kentucky Ghosts of the Bluegrass

    20 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn Ghosts of the Bluegrass, James McCormick and Macy Wyatt present stories of Kentucky ghosts past and present.

    20 in stock

    £20.42

  • Mass Communication Education

    10 in stock

    £70.79

  • Higher Education In The Gulf Problems and

    University of Exeter Press Higher Education In The Gulf Problems and

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book will be useful to those in the West and in the Middle East with an interest in the contemporary state of the higher educational system in the region and in education in general. It concentrates on the Gulf, but the problems of control, development, curriculum and purpose in higher education are found throughout the Middle East.Trade Review Table of ContentsContents: Gulf higher education - overview from the West and some themes for research, K.E. Shaw; internal evaluation in higher education - towards a model for Third World countries, Nathir G. Sara; quantifiable and unquantifiable costs and benefits of higher education in an Arab Gulf context, Kamil Mahdi; strategic studies in the Gulf, A. Rathmell; the dialogue of ink, blood and water - higher education in Iraq, progress and problems, A.J. Allaq; higher education in Oman - its development and prospects, M. al-Shibiny; higher education in the UAE - history and prospects, Khalifa al-Suwaidi; prospects of higher education in the UAE - the higher colleges of technology, S. al-Jassim; Sudanese influences on Gulf higher education, H.O. Ahmed; Omanisation and faculty development in Oman, F.N. al-Farsi; faculty and administration in Oman, Khalifa al-Saadi; curriculum and teacher training in the UAE, H.A. al-Banna.

    3 in stock

    £101.53

  • Pathfinder Press Problems of Everyday Life And Other Writings on

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    2 in stock

    £17.10

  • Pushcart Press The Art of Literary Publishing

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    10 in stock

    £15.75

  • YurokKarok Basket Weavers

    PA Hearst Museum of Anthropology YurokKarok Basket Weavers

    Book Synopsis

    £28.03

  • Carving Traditions of Northwest California

    PA Hearst Museum of Anthropology Carving Traditions of Northwest California

    Book Synopsis

    £18.71

  • Pomo Indian Basketry

    PA Hearst Museum of Anthropology Pomo Indian Basketry

    Book SynopsisAt the time of its publication in 1908, Pomo Indian Basketry was the most complete and detailed study of a single Native American basketry tradition. The work, prepared as Samuel Barrett''s doctoral dissertation, earned the author the first Ph.D. in anthropology at UC Berkeley. Among its contents are sections devoted to materials, techniques, forms, and designs. This edition is supplemented with two early articles, Basket Designs of the Pomo Indians by Barrett (1905) and California Basketry and the Pomo by his teacher Alfred Kroeber (1909). Sherrie Smith-Ferri''s introduction reviews Barrett''s early life and research and identifies the human sources of Barrett''s collections and information--a community of talented Pomoan basket weavers.Sherrie Smith-Ferri (Dry Creek Pomo/Bodega Miwok) is a curator at the Grace Hudson Museum in Ukiah, California.

    £28.93

  • Food in California Indian Culture Classics in

    PA Hearst Museum of Anthropology Food in California Indian Culture Classics in

    Book Synopsis

    £34.19

  • Invisible Americans The Tragic Cost of Child

    Random House USA Inc Invisible Americans The Tragic Cost of Child

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn essential, and impossible-to-ignore, examination of one of the most pressing, harmful, and heartbreaking problems facing our country: the widespread poverty among American children.By official count, more than one out of every six American children live beneath the poverty line. But statistics alone tell little of the story. In Invisible Americans, Jeff Madrick brings to light the often invisible reality and irreparable damage of child poverty in America. Keeping his focus on the children, he examines the roots of the problem, including the toothless remnants of our social welfare system, entrenched racism, and a government unmotivated to help the most voiceless citizens. Backed by new and unambiguous research, he makes clear the devastating consequences of growing up poor: living in poverty, even temporarily, is detrimental to cognitive abilities, emotional control, and the overall health of children. The cost to society is incalculable. The inaction of politi

    10 in stock

    £13.29

  • Social Provisioning Embeddedness and Modeling the

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Social Provisioning Embeddedness and Modeling the

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book consists of nine essays that model the economy considerably differently to mainstream economics. Contributes to the development of a model of a socially embedded economy, taking an alternative approach to mainstream economics Builds on a non-mainstream definition of economics as being concerned with social provisioning: a process in which all economic activities are social activities, informed by social norms, institutions, and ideologies Integrates different theories of economic modelling, including the social surplus approach, social fabric matrix, social accounting matrix, social structures of accumulation, stock-flow consistent modelling, and structure-agency Reviews the introduction of state money (and hence the financial sector) into an input-output model a somewhat new innovation in modelling the economy Table of ContentsEditors’ Introduction—Frederic S. Lee 1. Social Provisioning Process and Socio-Economic Modeling—Tae-Hee Jo 2. A Simple Economic Model of the Surplus Approach to Value and Distribution—Scott Carter 3. Demand, Structural Interdependence and Economic Provisioning—Gary Mongiovi 4. Modeling the Economic Surplus in a SAM Framework—Erik K. Olsen 5. Integrating the Social Structure of Accumulation and Social Accounting Matrix with the Social Fabric Matrix—F. Gregory Hayden 6. Social Structures of Accumulation: A “Punctuated” View of Embeddedness—Terrance McDonough 7. Comparing Pension Systems in the Circular Flow of Income—Andrew B. Trigg and Jonquil T. Lowe 8. Modeling the Economy as a Whole: An Integrative Approach—Frederic S. Lee

    10 in stock

    £91.15

  • How Socialization Happens on the Ground

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd How Socialization Happens on the Ground

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis monograph builds upon our cumulative efforts to investigate personal storytelling as a medium of socialization in two disparate cultural worlds. Drawing upon interdisciplinary fields of study that take a discourse-centered approach to socialization, we combined ethnography, longitudinal home observations, and micro-level analysis of everyday talk to study this problem in Taiwanese families in Taipei and European-American families in Longwood, Chicago. Comparative analyses of 192 hours, of video-recorded observations revealed that convserational stories of young children''s past experiences occurred in both sites at remarkably similar rates and continued apace across the age span, yielding nearly 900 narrations. Thse and other similarities coexisted with differences in culturall salient interpretive frameworks and participant roles, forming distinct socializating pathways. The Taipei families enacted a didactic framework, prolifically and elaborately narrating and correcting childrTable of ContentsAbstract I. Introduction II. Studying Personal Storytelling in Taipei and Longwood III. Interpretive Frameworks in Routine Practices IV. Participant Roles V. Children Navigating Stories VI. Discussion References Acknowledgements Contributors Statement of Editorial Policy Subject Index

    10 in stock

    £39.95

  • The Anthropology of Citizenship

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Anthropology of Citizenship

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Anthropology of Citizenship introduces the theoretical foundations of and cutting edge approaches to citizenship in the contemporary world, in local, national and global contexts. Key readings provide a cross-cultural perspective on citizenship practices, and an individual citizen's relationship with the state. Introduces a range of exciting and cutting edge approaches to citizenship in the contemporary world Provides key readings for students and researchers who wish to gain an understanding of citizenship practices, and an individual's relationship with the state in a global context Offers an anthropological perspective on citizenship, the self and political agency, with a focus on encounters between citizens and the state in education, law, development, and immigration policy Provides students with an understanding of the theoretical foundations of citizenship, as characterized by liberal and civic republican ideas of political bTrade Review"Lazar should be commended for her impressive introduction to the volume, which is in itself a valuable introduction to the anthropology of citizenship." (Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1 February 2015) Table of ContentsIntroduction 1Sian Lazar Part I Theoretical Foundations 23 Introduction 25 I.1 Civic Republican Traditions 27 1 The Democratic Citizen 29Pericles 2 The Politics 31Aristotle 3 The Social Contract, 1762 35Jean-Jacques Rousseau 4 The Decline of the Nation-State and the End of the Rights of Man, 1951 38Hannah Arendt I.2 Liberal Traditions 41 5 Two Treatises of Government, 1689 43John Locke 6 Declaration of the Rights of Man, France, 1789 47 7 The Second Constitution of Haiti (Hayti), May 20, 1805 49 8 Citizenship and Social Class, 1950 52T. H. Marshall The Liberal–Communitarian Debate 61 9 The Ideal of Community and the Politics of Difference, 1986 63Iris Marion Young I.3 Constructing an Anthropology of Citizenship 73 10 Cultural Citizenship in San Jose, California, 1994 75Renato Rosaldo 11 Cultural Citizenship as Subject-Making: Immigrants Negotiate Racial and Cultural Boundaries in the United States, 1996 79Aihwa Ong 12 Spaces of Insurgent Citizenship, 1999 93James Holston Part II Ethnographic Explorations 99 II.1 Citizenship Regimes, Subject-Formation and the State 101 Introduction 103 13 Education for Credit: Development as Citizenship Project in Bolivia, 2004 107Sian Lazar 14 Producing Good Citizens: Languages, Bodies, Emotions, 2008 120Véronique Benei 15 Biological Citizenship: The Science and Politics of Chernobyl-Exposed Populations, 2004 139Adriana Petryna Inclusive Citizenship and Claims-Making from Below 147 16 Reframing Agrarian Citizenship: Land, Life and Power in Brazil, 2009 149Hannah Wittman 17 Life Itself: Triage and Therapeutic Citizenship, 2010 163Vinh-Kim Nguyen II.2 Citizenship beyond the Nation-State 177 Introduction 179 18 The Queen of the Chinese Colony: Contesting Nationalism, En-Gendering Diaspora, 2005 181Lok C. D. Siu 19 Transborder Citizenship: An Outcome of Legal Pluralism within Transnational Social Fields, 2005 196Nina Glick Schiller 20 Difficult Distinctions: Refugee Law, Humanitarian Practice and Political Identification in Gaza, 2007 208Ilana Feldman Urban Citizenship 227 21 The Implosion of Modern Public Life, 2000 229Teresa P. R. Caldeira 22 Contesting Citizenship in Urban China: Peasant Migrants, the State and the Logic of the Market, 1999 248Dorothy J. Solinger II.3 The Citizen and the Non-citizen 267 Introduction 269 23 The War of ‘Who is Who’: Autochthony, Nationalism and Citizenship in the Ivoirian Crisis, 2006 271Ruth Marshall-Fratani 24 Practicing German Citizenship, 2008 292Ruth Mandel 25 The Legal Production of Mexican/Migrant ‘Illegality’, 2005 309Nicholas de Genova Index 326

    10 in stock

    £92.95

  • Two Views of Social Justice

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Two Views of Social Justice

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis volume is the first of its kind, bringing together adherents of two major schools of thought that have sometimes been in bitter opposition to one another to address critical issues of our time.Table of ContentsTwo Views of Social Justice: A Catholic/Georgist Dialogue — Kenneth R. Lord NATURAL LAW Principal Concepts in Henry George’s Theory of Natural Law: A Brief Commentary on The Science of Political Economy — Francis K. Peddle Natural Law and the Roman Catholic Tradition: The Importance of Philosophical Realism — Anthony J. Lisska HUMAN NATURE Human Nature from a Georgist Perspective — James Dawsey Human Nature from a Catholic Perspective — Joseph Koterski, S.J. NATURE OF WORK Just Reward: The Nature of Work and Its Remuneration in the Economics and Ethics of Henry George—Brendan Hennigan Human Work in Catholic Social Thought — Daniel Finn RERUM NOVARUM Going My Way? Wending a Way Through the Stumbling Blocks Between Georgism and Catholicism — Mason Gaffney A Catholic Response to Henry George’s Critique of Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum — J. Brian Benestad CAUSES OF WAR Henry George’s Perspective on War and Peace — Alanna Hartzok Just War: A Catholic Perspective Cui Non Videtur Causa Justa? — Margaret Monahan Hogan IMMIGRATION Henry George and Immigration — John H. Beck A Little Common Sense: The Ethics of Immigration in Catholic Social Teaching — William R. O’Neill, S.J.

    10 in stock

    £37.95

  • Girls Delinquency and Juvenile Justice

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Girls Delinquency and Juvenile Justice

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe new edition of Girls, Delinquency, and Juvenile Justice combines cutting-edge research and expanded coverage of girls delinquency, including coverage of girls in gangs and the sexual trafficking of girls, to provide students with an accessible, up-to-date, and globally oriented textbook.Table of ContentsPreface to the Fourth Edition x 1 Introduction: Why a Book on Girls and Juvenile Justice? 1 2 The Extent of Female Delinquency 9 Recent Trends: National Arrest Data 9 Self-Report Surveys 19 Delinquent Careers 22 Racial Differences 24 Summary 29 Notes 30 References 30 3 The Nature of Female Delinquency 34 Girls and Shoplift ing 34 Status Offenses 37 Runaways 42 Prostitution among Girls 44 International Prostitution 47 Girls and Violence 48 Relabeling Status Off enses 54 Aggression and Gender 55 Girls and Robbery 58 Summary 60 Note 61 References 62 4 Girls and Gangs 72 Trends in Girl Gang Membership 74 Criminal Activities of Girls in Gangs 75 Types of Female Gangs 78 Moving Beyond the Stereotypes: The Social Context of Girl Gangs 80 Class and race 80 Drug use 83 Reasons for joining the gang 85 Relationship with males and male gangs 90 Family-related issues 93 School and work 99 Summary 101 Notes 102 References 102 5 Theories of Crime and Female Delinquency 107 Early Theories of Female Delinquency 108 Sociological Theories of (Male) Delinquency: Do They Apply to Girls? 115 Social disorganization/social ecology theory 115 Strain Th eory 118 Cultural Deviance Theories 122 Cohen’s “culture of the gang” 122 Miller’s “lower-class culture” 123 Differential Association 124 Control Theory 124 Labeling Theory 126 Critical/Marxist Perspectives 128 A Concluding Note 130 Towards a Th eory of Female Delinquency 131 The Women’s Movement and Female Crime 135 Feminist Criminology 138 Summary 139 Notes 141 References 141 6 Girls’ Lives and Girls’ Delinquency 146 Growing Up Female 146 Welcome to “Girlworld”: “Oh, Look at Me I’m So Pretty” 149 Girls, Parents, and Peers 153 Girls, Peers, and Pathways into Delinquency 157 Girls and the Sexual Double Standard 158 Girls’ Victimization and Girls’ Crime 160 Girls’ victimization and female delinquency 162 Contemporary Th inking about Adolescence, Gender, and Crime 165 Sisters are doing it for themselves 167 Street liberation perspectives 167 Contemporary Perspectives of Girls’ Delinquency and Violence 168 Patriarchy and gendered inequalities 169 Beyond victimization: violent girls as “one of the guys” 170 Girls’ code of the streets: considering race, class, and gender 172 Context matters in girls’ delinquency 173 Summary 176 Note 177 References 178 7 Girls and the Juvenile Justice System: A Historical Overview 183 The Doctrine of Parens Patriae: Roots of a Double Standard of Juvenile Justice 184 Ex Parte Crouse: Challenging Parens Patriae 187 People v. Turner: Over-Ruling Crouse 188 The Child-Saving Movement and the Juvenile Court 189 “The Best Place to Conquer Girls” 195 The Juvenile Court and the Double Standard of Juvenile Justice 196 Deinstitutionalization and Judicial Paternalism: Challenges to the Double Standard of Juvenile Justice 200 Unpopular Reform? 201 Recent Trends: Finally a Focus on Girls, the Republican Backlash, and Congressional Gridlock 204 Summary 208 Notes 209 References 210 8 The Contemporary Juvenile Justice System and Girls, Part I: Police and Juvenile Court Processing 215 An Overview of the System and Process 215 Th e Rights of Juveniles: A Review of Key Cases 216 Implications of Supreme Court Rulings for Girls 219 Getting into the System 221 Girls on the Streets 222 Girls at the Station House 225 Delinquents in Court 228 Gender and Delinquency Referrals 229 Comparing Girls and Boys in Court 232 Girls, Race, and the New Double Standard of Juvenile Justice 235 Summary 237 Notes 238 References 238 9 The Contemporary Juvenile Justice System and Girls, Part II: Girls in Institutions 243 Youths in Institutions: A National Overview 244 Number of girls in institutions 244 Private facilities: a problematic option for juvenile justice 247 Demographic Characteristics of Youths in Institutions 250 Status off enses and bootstrapping, a continuing problem 250 Girls in detention 251 Girls’ experiences in detention 253 Gender and training schools – girls’ victimization continues 259 Girls, race, and institutionalization 263 Summary 266 Notes 267 References 268 10 In Their Own Words: Voices of Youths at Risk 273 With assistance from Vera Lopez and Julia Foley Introduction 273 Relationship Power, Control, and Dating Violence Among Latina Girls 275 Boys’ control strategies 276 Girls’ counterstrategies 278 The “Risky” Lives of Girl Delinquents: Bottcher’s California Study 281 Summary 284 Note 285 References 285 11 Programs for Girls in Trouble 286 Interconnected Troubles 286 Trauma 287 Destructive and distraught families 287 Dangerous neighborhoods and unsafe schools 288 Substance abuse 289 Health issues 290 Academic achievement 290 Specific Types of Counseling and Education 292 The Detention Diversion Advocacy Project (DDAP) 292 Gender differences 294 Gaps in Services for Girls 296 Explaining the lack of services for girls 297 The fit of assessed needs, expressed needs, and program descriptions 299 Someone to talk to 300 Improving relationships with peers 301 Sex, sexuality, pregnancy, parenting, and relationships with intimate partners 301 Empowerment 303 Multiple needs and wraparound services 304 Assessed Needs, Expressed Needs, and Contemporary Program Evaluations 304 The Ideal Program 306 Instead of Incarceration: What Could Be Done to Meet the Needs of Girls? 308 Are Gender-Specific Programs Necessary? 310 Programming as if Girls Mattered: Getting Past Girls Watching Boys Play Sports 311 Lack of validated gender-specific programs: programming and the “forgotten few” 311 Honolulu Girls Court: Overview of a Promising Best Practice 312 Policy Implications and Future Directions 314 Summary 315 Notes 317 References 318 12 Conclusions 324 Index 331

    10 in stock

    £47.95

  • Physiological Measures of Emotion From a

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Physiological Measures of Emotion From a

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisBeauty has a well-documented impact on labor market outcomes with both legal and policy implications. This monograph investigated whether this stratification is rooted in earlier developmental experiences. Specifically, we explored how high schools'' dual roles as contexts of social relations and academic progress contributed to the long-term socioeconomic advantages of being physically attractive. Integrating theories from multiple disciplines, the conceptual model of this study contends that physically attractive youths'' greater social integration and lesser social stigma help them accumulate psychosocial resources that support their academic achievement while also selecting them into social activities that distract from good grades. A mixed-methods design, combining statistical analyses of the National Longitudinal Survey of Adolescent Health and qualitative analyses of a single high school, supported and expanded this model. The data revealed that the benefits of attractivenessTable of ContentsABSTRACT INTRODUCTION TO THE MONOGRAPH: PHYSIOLOGICAL MEASURES OF EMOTION FROM A DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVE: STATE OF THE SCIENCE INTRODUCTION TO SECTION ONE: INTEGRATIVE APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF PHYSIOLOGY AND EMOTION EEG/ERP MEASURES OF EMOTION–COGNITION INTEGRATION DURING DEVELOPMENT EMOTION–CORTISOL TRANSACTIONS OCCUR OVER MULTIPLE TIME SCALES IN DEVELOPMENT: IMPLICATIONS FOR RESEARCH ON EMOTION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF EMOTIONAL DISORDERS NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN TEMPERAMENT: A BRAIN–BODY APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING FEARFUL AND FEARLESS CHILDREN INTRODUCTION TO SECTION TWO: SOCIALIZATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS IN THE PHYSIOLOGY OF EMOTION PARENT–INFANT SYNCHRONY: A BIOBEHAVIORAL MODEL OF MUTUAL INFLUENCES IN THE FORMATION OF AFFILIATIVE BONDS DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND EMOTION SOCIALIZATION THE IMPORTANCE OF BIOLOGICAL METHODS IN LINKING SOCIAL EXPERIENCE WITH SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTRODUCTION TO SECTION THREE: PHYSIOLOGY AND AFFECTIVE PSYCHOPATHOLOGY PHYSIOLOGICAL MEASURES OF EMOTION DYSREGULATION: INVESTIGATING THE DEVELOPMENT OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS PHYSIOLOGICAL MARKERS OF EMOTION AND BEHAVIOR DYSREGULATION IN EXTERNALIZING PSYCHOPATHOLOGY NEUROENDOCRINE REGULATION AND EMOTIONAL ADAPTATION IN THE CONTEXT OF CHILD MALTREATMENT INTRODUCTION TO SECTION FOUR: OVERARCHING ISSUES AND METHODOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS: WHAT CAN PHYSIOLOGICAL MEASURES REVEAL ABOUT EMOTION? MEASURING THE PHYSIOLOGY OF EMOTION AND EMOTION REGULATION—TIMING IS EVERYTHING THE HYPOTHALAMIC–PITUITARY–ADRENOCORTICAL SYSTEM AND EMOTION: CURRENT WISDOM AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY OF EMOTION PROCESSES ASPECTS OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL DATA ANALYSIS: EEG COHERENCY AND fMRI CONNECTIVITY MAPPING REFERENCES CONTRIBUTORS STATEMENT OF EDITORIAL POLICY SUBJECT INDEX

    10 in stock

    £37.95

  • A Companion to the Anthropology of the Middle

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd A Companion to the Anthropology of the Middle

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisA Companion to the Anthropology of the Middle East presents a comprehensive overview of current trends and future directions in anthropological research and activism in the modern Middle East.Trade Review"...clear and engaging. Graduate sociocultural anthropology students, advanced undergraduates, and specialists will find this survey book valuable. Parts of this volume are also essential for policymakers since some of discussed anthropological themes are now at the core of contemporary world affairs." - Solaiman M. Fazel, AAA Book ForumTable of ContentsNotes on Contributors x Acknowledgments xvii Preface xviii Part I Introduction: Theoretical and Conceptual Issues 1 1 Enduring Concerns, Resilient Tropes, and New Departures: Reading the Companion 3Deniz Kandiyoti 2 Theory and Thematics in the Anthropology of the Middle East 15Suad Joseph 3 Structure/Agency and the Anthropology of the Middle East 40Soraya Altorki 4 Reflections on the Politics of Middle East Studies 72Steven C. Caton Part II Culture and Everyday Life 89 5 The Politics of Aesthetics in the Muslim Middle East 91Martin Stokes 6 Dreams and the Miraculous 107Amira Mittermaier 7 Refiguring Islam 125Nada Moumtaz 8 In the Garden of the Sexes: Of Men, Women, Gaze, and Hair 151Shahla Haeri 9 Trajectories of Gendered Labor 172Livia Wick 10 The Politics of Poetry 188J. Andrew Bush Part III Social Relations and Social Movements 205 11 Medical Anthropology in the Middle East and North Africa 207Jessica Newman and Marcia C. Inhorn 12 From Rural Development to Environmental Anthropology 233Nicholas S. Hopkins 13 Displacement and Dispossession in the Middle East 249Dawn Chatty 14 Anthropology and Humanitarianism in the Middle East 262Ilana Feldman 15 Anthropologies of Middle Eastern Diasporas 282Paul A. Silverstein 16a The Invention of the Mizrahim 316Ella Shohat 16b The Mizrahi Cinema of Displacement 329Ella Shohat 17 Social Movements and Revolution 338Zeina Zaatari Part IV Law, Politics, and the State 361 18 Justice between Islamic Sharia and Liberal Law: Remarks on the Egyptian Context 363Hussein Ali Agrama 19 The Notion of Arab Culture and the “Colonial Present” 391Mayssoun Sukarieh 20 Rethinking Anthropology of Neoliberalism in the Middle East 411Julia Elyachar 21 “States of Aspiration”: Anthropology and New Questions for the Middle East 434Michelle Obeid 22 Rethinking the “Post]Ottoman”: Anatolian Armenians as an Ethnographic Perspective 452Hakem Al]Rustom 23 Reframing the Middle Eastern City: Thoughts on New Research 480Kamran Asdar Ali Part V Pop Culture and New Media 493 24 Middle Eastern Music and Popular Culture 495John Philip Rode Schaefer 25 New Media and Electronic Networks 509Mark Allen Peterson Index 526

    10 in stock

    £160.50

  • Emotions Are a Window Into Ones Heart

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Emotions Are a Window Into Ones Heart

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe main goal of this Monograph is to understand parents'' beliefs about the role of emotions in the family and how cultural or ethnic background may influence those beliefs. Implications of parental beliefs for emotion socialization theory and future research, as well as limitations, are discussed.Table of ContentsI. INTRODUCTION II. OVERVIEW OF FOCUS GROUP METHODOLOGY III. THE CURRENT STUDY IV. RESULTS V. DISCUSSION APPENDIX REFERENCES ACKNOWLEDGMENTS CONTRIBUTORS STATEMENT OF EDITORIAL POLICY SUBJECT INDEX

    10 in stock

    £37.95

  • The Pharmaceutical Studies Reader

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Pharmaceutical Studies Reader

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Pharmaceutical Studies Reader is an engaging survey of the field that brings together provocative, multi-disciplinary scholarship examining the interplay of medical science, clinical practice, consumerism, and the healthcare marketplace.Table of ContentsAcknowledgements vii 1 Introduction 1Jeremy A. Greene and Sergio Sismondo Part I Pharmaceutical Lives 17 2 The Pharmaceuticalisation of Society? A Framework for Analysis 19Simon J. Williams, Paul Martin and Jonathan Gabe 3 Pharmaceutical Witnessing: Drugs for Life in an Era of Direct]to]Consumer Advertising 33Joseph Dumit Part II New Drugs, Diseases, and Identities 49 4 Releasing the Flood Waters: Diuril and the Reshaping of Hypertension 51Jeremy A. Greene 5 Dep®ession and ConsumŠtion: Psychopharmaceuticals, Branding, and New Identity Practices 70Nathan Greenslit 6 BiDil: Medicating the Intersection of Race and Heart Failure 87Anne Pollock 7 Manufacturing Desire: The Commodification of Female Sexual Dysfunction 106Jennifer R. Fishman Part III Drugs and the Circulation of Medical Knowledge 121 8 Following the Script: How Drug Reps Make Friends and Influence Doctors 123Adriane Fugh]Berman and Shahram Ahari 9 Getting to Yes: Corporate Power and the Creation of a Psychopharmaceutical Blockbuster 133Kalman Applbaum 10 Pushing Knowledge in the Drug Industry: Ghost]Managed Science 150Sergio Sismondo 11 Transcultural Medicine: A Multi]Sited Ethnography on the Scientific]Industrial Networking of Korean Medicine 165Jongyoung Kim Part IV Political and Moral Economies of Pharmaceutical Research 179 12 Uncommon Trajectories: Steroid Hormones, Mexican Peasants, and the Search for a Wild Yam 181Gabriela Soto Laveaga 13 “Ready]to]Recruit” or “Ready]to]Consent” Populations? Informed Consent and the Limits of Subject Autonomy 195Jill A. Fisher 14 Clinical Trials Offshored: On Private Sector Science and Public Health 208Adriana Petryna 15 The Experimental Machinery of Global Clinical Trials: Case Studies from India 222Kaushik Sunder Rajan Part V Intellectual Property in Local and Global Markets 235 16 Intellectual Property and Public Health: Copying of HIV/AIDS Drugs by Brazilian Public and Private Pharmaceutical Laboratories 237Maurice Cassier and Marilena Correa 17 Global Pharmaceutical Markets and Corporate Citizenship: The Case of Novartis’ Anti]Cancer Drug Glivec 247Stefan Ecks 18 Generic Medicines and the Question of the Similar 261Cori Hayden Index 268

    10 in stock

    £85.45

  • A Companion to the Harlem Renaissance

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd A Companion to the Harlem Renaissance

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisA Companion to the Harlem Renaissance presents a comprehensive collection of original essays that address the literature and culture of the Harlem Renaissance from the end of World War I to the middle of the 1930s.Table of ContentsNotes on Contributors ix Introduction: Harlem as Shorthand: The Persistent Value of the Harlem Renaissance 1Cherene Sherrard-Johnson Part I Foundations 15 1 What Renaissance?: A Deep Genealogy of Black Culture in Nineteenth-Century New York City 17Carla L. Peterson 2 Postbellum, Pre-Harlem: Black Writing before the Renaissance 35Andreá N. Williams 3 Harlem Nights: Expressive Culture, Popular Performance, and the New Negro 51Jayna Brown 4 The New Negro and the New South 65Erin D. Chapman Part II Spotlight: Readings and Genre 81 5 “All the loving words I never dared to speak”: Angelina Weld Grimké’s Sapphic Modernism 83Maureen Honey 6 Modernism and the Urban Frontier in the Work of Dorothy West and Helene Johnson 103Cynthia Davis and Verner D. Mitchell 7 Blueprints for Negro Reading: Sterling Brown’s Study Guides 119Sonya Posmentier 8 Fashioning Internationalism in Jessie Redmon Fauset’s Writing 137Elizabeth M. Sheehan 9 The New Negro Iconoclast, or, The Curious Case of George Samuel Schuyler 155Ivy G. Wilson 10 Nella Larsen’s Spiritual Strivings 171Kathy L. Glass 11 Pastoral and the Problem of Place in Claude McKay’s Harlem Shadows 187Jennifer Chang 12 Gwendolyn Bennett: A Leading Voice of the Harlem Renaissance 203Belinda Wheeler 13 Reconsidering the Literary Career of Chicago’s Zara Wright 219Rynetta Davis 14 “Betwixt and between”: Zora Neale Hurston In—and Out—of Harlem 231Carla Kaplan Part III Salon Culture: The Visual, Performative, and Expressive Arts 249 15 Salon Cultures and Spaces of Culture Edification 251André m. Carrington 16 The Sensuous Harlem Renaissance: Sexuality and Queer Culture 267Shane Vogel 17 Changing Optics: Harlem Renaissance Theater and Performance 285Soyica Diggs Colbert 18 Phonography, Race Records, and the Blues Poetry of Langston Hughes 301Lisa Hollenbach 19 Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Sculpture of the Harlem Renaissance 317Kirsten Pai Buick Part IV Interracialism 337 20 Authenticity and the Boundaries of Blackness 339J. Martin Favor 21 Black Marxism and the Literary Left 351Gary Edward Holcomb 22 “Light, bright and damn near white”: Representations of Mixed Race in the Harlem Renaissance 369Michele Elam Part V Beyond Harlem: New Geographies and Lasting Influences 385 23 The Aesthetics of Anticipation: The Harlem Renaissance and the Black Arts Movement 387Margo Natalie Crawford 24 The “Lost Years” or a “Decade of Progress”?: African American Writers and the Second World War 403Vaughn Rasberry 25 Ethiopia in the Verse of the Late Harlem Renaissance 423Nadia Nurhussein 26 Mapping the Harlem Renaissance in the Americas 441Michael Soto 27 Virtual Harlem: Experiencing the New Negro Renaissance 457Bryan Carter Index 473

    10 in stock

    £136.95

  • Different but Equal

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Different but Equal

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis Provides a collection of original papers offering new insights on how to more accurately measure the contributions of dissident economists.

    10 in stock

    £36.05

  • What Makes a Difference

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd What Makes a Difference

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisA randomized trial evaluated the efficacy of 17 Early Head Start (EHS) programs. 3,001 low-income families with a pregnant women or an infant under 12 months were assigned to a treatment or control group. Data were collected when children were 1, 2, 3, and 5 years old. Analyses examined (1) impacts at ages 2 and 3 (while services were being offered) and at age 5, and (2) contributions of early education experiences across children''s first 5 years of life. Child outcomes included cognition, language, attention, behavior problems, and health; maternal outcomes included parenting, mental health, and employmentTable of ContentsI. BACKGROUND LITERATURE REVIEW PERTAINING TO THE EARLY HEAD START STUDYHelen H. Raikes, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, and John M. Love II. DESIGN AND METHODS IN THE EARLY HEAD START STUDYRichard A. Faldowski, Rachel Chazan-Cohen, John M. Love, and Cheri Vogel III. IMPACTS OF EARLY HEAD START PARTICIPATION ON CHILD AND PARENT OUTCOMES AT AGES 2, 3, AND 5Cheri Vogel, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Anne Martin, and Mary M. Klute IV. FAMILY SUBGROUPS AND IMPACTS AT AGES 2, 3, AND 5: VARIABILITY BY RACE/ETHNICITY AND DEMOGRAPHIC RISKHelen H. Raikes, Cheri Vogel, and John M. Love V. PROGRAM SUBGROUPS: PATTERNS OF IMPACTS FOR HOME-BASED, CENTER-BASED, AND MIXED-APPROACH PROGRAMSRachel Chazan-Cohen, Helen H. Raikes, and Cheri Vogel VI. LINKS BETWEEN EARLY CARE AND EDUCATION EXPERIENCES BIRTH TO AGE 5 AND PREKINDERGARTEN OUTCOMESRachel Chazan-Cohen and Ellen E. Kisker VII. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONSJeanne Brooks-Gunn, John M. Love, Helen H. Raikes, and Rachel Chazan-Cohen REFERENCES ACKNOWLEDGMENTS CONTRIBUTORS STATEMENT OF EDITORIAL POLICY SUBJECT INDEX

    10 in stock

    £37.95

  • Markets Competition and the Economy as a Social

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Markets Competition and the Economy as a Social

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book is an examination of markets, competition, and market governance from a critical, heterodox perspective. .Table of ContentsEditor's Introduction Frederic S. Lee Economy as a Social System: Niklas Luhmann's Contribution and its Significance for Economics Ivan Boldyrev Social Network Analysis and the Sociology of Economics: Filling a Blind Spot with the Idea of Social Embeddedness Dieter Boegenhold Scmoller’s Method as a Critique and Alternative to Marginalist Economics: A Comment to Louzek Carlo D'Ippoliti The Economic Deterioration of the Family: Historical Contingencies Preceding the Great Depression Michael Gillespie The Market Concept: A Characterization from Institutional and Post Keynesian Economics Eduardo Fernandez-Huerga Understanding the Socio-Economics Impact of Actually Existing Markets: An Analytical Framework for Empirical Research Lynn Chester Three Makes of Competition in the Marketplace William Redmond Saving Private Business Enterprises: A Heterodox Microeconomic Approach to Market Governance and Market Regulation Tae-Hee Jo Consumer Market Cycles Riders, Industries and Environments in France and the United States, 1865-1914 Thomas C. Burr The End of the Consensus in Macroeconomic Theory? A Methodological Inquiry John McCombie and Maureen Pike

    10 in stock

    £36.95

  • The Handbook of Drugs and Society

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Handbook of Drugs and Society

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis handbook provides a comprehensive examination of the past and present roles of drugs in society with a focus on theory, research, policy, and practice.Table of ContentsList of Contributors x Notes on Contributors xiii Acknowledgements xxi Part I Understanding Drugs in Society 1 1 Drugs and Society 3Henry H. Brownstein Part II The Use and Marketing of Particular Drugs in Society 15 2 Alcohol: Wide]Ranging Problems, Inadequate Responses 17Norman Giesbrecht and Robin Room 3 Global Marijuana Cultivation and Societal Place Because and In Spite of US Policy and Perception 53Charles Hogan and Scott Jacques 4 Heroin and Other Opiates 72Timothy W. Kinlock and Michael S. Gordon 5 Cocaine Powder and Crack Cocaine: A Changeable History? 90Paul Gootenberg 6 Methamphetamine 109Ralph A. Weisheit 7 Prescription Drugs 128Brian C. Kelly and Mark Pawson 8 Designer Drugs 149Dina Perrone Part III Explaining the Place of Drugs in Society 175 9 Drug Use as a Socially Constructed Problem 177Peter J. Venturelli 10 Social Scientific Theories of Drug Use, Abuse, and Addiction 197Stephen J. Bahr and John P. Hoffmann 11 The Intersection between Neurobiological and Psychological Theories of Substance Use Disorders 218Arielle R. Baskin]Sommers and Bridget A. Hearon Part IV Studying Drugs in Society 237 12 Ethnographic Studies of Drugs in Communities 239Sheigla Murphy, Paloma Sales, and Sheigla Averill 13 Measurement and Design Challenges in the Study of Drugs and Society 258Eric L. Sevigny and Brian Fuleihan Part V What We Know and Do Not Know about Drugs and Public Health and Safety 283 14 What Has Been Learned from Research on the Drugs–Crime Connection? 285Trevor Bennett and Jason Edwards 15 The Impact of Illicit Drugs on Public Health 300Louisa Degenhardt and Wayne D. Hall 16 Research on Drugs and Social Characteristics 320Kathryn M. Nowotny, Jessica Frankeberger, and Alice Cepeda 17 Public Safety and Public Health in a Geographic and Economic Context 335Paul Draus and Juliette Roddy Part VI Drugs and Adverse Social Experience 369 18 Drugs and Violent Crime 371Henry H. Brownstein 19 Drugs and Violence in Personal and Intimate Relationships 387Deborah Baskin and Ira Sommers 20 Markets and Distribution Systems: The Birth, Growth, and Transformation of UK Drug Markets 416Tiggey May and Bina Bhardwa Part VII Drugs as an Illicit Enterprise 443 21 The Criminalization of (Some) Drug]Involved People 445Neil McKeganey 22 The Culture and Subcultures of Illicit Drug Use and Distribution 460Geoffrey Hunt and Karen Joe]Laidler 23 Displacement Effects of Supply]Reduction Policies in Latin America: A Tipping Point in Cocaine Trafficking, 2006–2008 482Juan Carlos Garzón and John Bailey Part VIII Responding to the Problem and Problems of Drugs in Society 505 24 Drug Law Enforcement 507Andrew Golub, Alex S. Bennett, and Luther C. Elliott 25 Drug Abuse Prevention through Early Childhood Intervention 525Elizabeth B. Robertson, Belinda E. Sims, and Eve E. Reider 26 Dealing with Drug Users: Treatment 555TaLisa J. Carter and Daniel O’Connell 27 Drug Policy in the United States: A Dynamic Multilevel Experimental Environment 574Duane C. McBride and Yvonne Terry]McElrath Index 594

    10 in stock

    £160.50

  • Health Geographies

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Health Geographies

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisHealth Geographies: A Critical Introduction explores health and biomedical topics from a range of critical geographic perspectives. Building on the field s past engagement with social theory it extends the focus of health geography into new areas of enquiry.Table of ContentsList of Figures vii List of Tables viii List of Boxes ix Notes on Contributors x Foreword xii 1 Introduction 1Tim Brown, Gavin J. Andrews, Steven Cummins, Beth Greenhough, Dan Lewis, Andrew Power Part I Body, Health and Disease 21 2 The Body in Health Geography 23Tim Brown 3 Health and Place 39Gavin J. Andrews Part II Changing Spaces of (Health) Care 57 4 Landscapes of Wellbeing 59Gavin J. Andrews 5 (Re)Locating, Reforming and Providing Health Care 75Gavin J. Andrews 6 Spaces of Care 95Andrew Power 7 Post]Asylum Geographies 114Andrew Power Part III Producing Health 135 8 Ecological Approaches to Public Health 137Steve Cummins 9 Capturing Complexity 156Dan Lewis 10 Interventions for Population Health 174Steve Cummins Part IV Emerging Geographies of Health and Biomedicine 191 11 Epidemics and Biosecurity 193Beth Greenhough 12 Pharmaceuticalisation and Medical Research 215Beth Greenhough 13 Health and Medical Tourism 234Beth Greenhough 14 Global Health Geographies 251Tim Brown Index

    10 in stock

    £40.07

  • Health Geographies

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Health Geographies

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisHealth Geographies: A Critical Introduction explores health and biomedical topics from a range of critical geographic perspectives. Building on the field s past engagement with social theory it extends the focus of health geography into new areas of enquiry.Table of ContentsList of Figures vii List of Tables viii List of Boxes ix Notes on Contributors x Foreword xii 1 Introduction 1Tim Brown, Gavin J. Andrews, Steven Cummins, Beth Greenhough, Dan Lewis, Andrew Power Part I Body, Health and Disease 21 2 The Body in Health Geography 23Tim Brown 3 Health and Place 39Gavin J. Andrews Part II Changing Spaces of (Health) Care 57 4 Landscapes of Wellbeing 59Gavin J. Andrews 5 (Re)Locating, Reforming and Providing Health Care 75Gavin J. Andrews 6 Spaces of Care 95Andrew Power 7 Post-Asylum Geographies 114Andrew Power Part III Producing Health 135 8 Ecological Approaches to Public Health 137Steve Cummins 9 Capturing Complexity 156Dan Lewis 10 Interventions for Population Health 174Steve Cummins Part IV Emerging Geographies of Health and Biomedicine 191 11 Epidemics and Biosecurity 193Beth Greenhough 12 Pharmaceuticalisation and Medical Research 215Beth Greenhough 13 Health and Medical Tourism 234Beth Greenhough 14 Global Health Geographies 251Tim Brown Index

    10 in stock

    £70.95

  • The Emergence of a Temporally Extended Self and

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Emergence of a Temporally Extended Self and

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe validity of the Delayed Self-Recognition (DSR) test was verified by comparing the performance of 57 children on the DSR test to their performance on a meta-representational task (modified false belief task) and to a task that was essentially the same as the DSR test but was specifi cally designed to rely on the capacity to entertain secondary representations (i.e., surprise body task). Longitudinal testing of the children showed that at the mental age (MA) of 2.5 years they failed the DSR test, despite training them to understand the intended functions of the medium used in the DSR test; whereas, with training, children at the MA of 3.0 and 3.5 years exhibited DSR. Children at the MA of 4 years exhibited DSR without any training. Finally, results suggest that children's meta-representational ability was the only factor that contributed to the prediction of successful performance on the DSR test, and thus to the emergence of the temporally extended self (TES). Furthermore, prospectiTable of ContentsABSTRACT I. DEVELOPMENT OF A TEMPORALLY EXTENDED SELF II. METHOD III. EXAMINING THE REPRESENTATIONAL DEMANDS OF THE DELAYED SELF-RECOGNITION TASK IV. DO 2.5-YEAR-OLD CHILDREN HAVE THE REPRESENTATIONAL ABILITY FOR DSR? V. EXAMINING THE DEVELOPMENTAL TRANSITION OF THE SELF FROM ITS PRESENT STATE TO ITS TEMPORALLY EXTENDED STATE VI. EFFECT OF MENTAL AGE ON DSR COMPETENCY VII. THE CONTRIBUTION OF SOCIAL, COGNITIVE, AND LINGUISTIC FACTORS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE TES VIII. THE CONTRIBUTION OF SOCIAL, COGNITIVE, AND LINGUISTIC FACTORS TO FURTHER ADVANCES OF THE TES THE EMERGENCE OF A TEMPORALLY EXTENDED SELF AND FACTORS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO ITS DEVELOPMENT: FROM THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL PERSPECTIVES CONTENTS IX. METHODOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS AND DIRECTIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH APPENDIX REFERENCES ACKNOWLEDGMENTS CONTRIBUTORS STATEMENT OF EDITORIAL POLICY SUBJECT INDEX

    10 in stock

    £35.10

  • Childrens Understanding of Death

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Childrens Understanding of Death

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this monograph we (1) provide an account of young children''s socialization with respect to death and (2) develop a conception of children's understanding of death that encompasses affective and cognitive dimensions. Conducted in a small city in the Midwest, the project involved several component studies employing quantitative and qualitative methods. Middle-class, European American children (3-6 years, N = 101) were interviewed about their cognitive/affective understandings of death; their parents (N = 71) completed questionnaires about the children''s experiences and their own beliefs and practices. Other data included ethnographic observations, interviews, focus groups, and analyses of children''s books. Parents and teachers shared a dominant folk theory, believing that children should be shielded from death because they lack the emotional and cognitive capacity to understand or cope with death. Even the youngest children knew basic elements of the emotional script for death, Table of ContentsABSTRACT vii I. INTRODUCTION Peggy J. Miller, Karl S. Rosengren, and Isabel T. Gutiérrez 1 II. EUROPEAN AMERICANS IN CENTERVILLE: COMMUNITY AND FAMILY CONTEXTS Peggy J. Miller, Isabel T. Gutiérrez, Philip I. Chow, and Stevie S. Schein 19 III. AFFECTIVE DIMENSIONS OF DEATH: CHILDREN’S BOOKS, QUESTIONS, AND UNDERSTANDINGS Isabel T. Gutiérrez, Peggy J. Miller, Karl S. Rosengren, and Stevie S. Schein 43 IV. COGNITIVE DIMENSIONS OF DEATH IN CONTEXT Karl S. Rosengren, Isabel T. Gutiérrez, and Stevie S. Schein 62 V. COGNITIVE MODELS OF DEATH Karl S. Rosengren, Isabel T. Gutiérrez, and Stevie S. Schein 83 VI. MEXICAN AMERICAN IMMIGRANTS IN THE CENTERVILLE REGION: TEACHERS, CHILDREN, AND PARENTS Isabel T. Gutiérrez, Karl S. Rosengren, and Peggy J. Miller 97 VII. FINAL THOUGHTS Peggy J. Miller and Karl S. Rosengren 113 REFERENCES 125 APPENDIX A 134 APPENDIX B 138 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 141

    10 in stock

    £37.05

  • Ethics for a Digital Era

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Ethics for a Digital Era

    Book SynopsisElliott and Spence have produced a tight, teachable, and timely primer on media ethics for users and creators of information in the digital age. Pitched at just the right depth of detail to provide a big picture contextualization of changing media practices grounded in concerns for democracy and the public good, the book explores and reflects the implications of the convergence of the Fourth and Fifth Estates with an open-access, hyper-linked architecture which invites self-reflective practice on the part of its users Philip Gordon, Utah Valley University2019 PROSE Award Finalist in the Media & Cultural Studies category!The rapid and ongoing evolution of digital technologies has transformed the waythe world communicates and digests information. Fueled by a 24-hour news cycleand post-truth politics, media consumption and the technologies that drive ithave become more influential in shaping public opinion, and it has become more imperative than ever to examine their social and ethical coTable of ContentsAcknowledgments viii Introduction 1 Part I: From Analog to Digital News 11 1 A New Paradigm for News 13 2 Legacy News Organizations Move from Analog to Digital 37 3 Intellectual Property and Information Sharing 64 4 Citizen Responsibility in the Digital Era 76 Part II: Thinking Through Ethical Issues in Digital Journalism 89 5 DOIT, A Process for Normative Analysis 91 6 Issues in Convergent Journalism 104 7 Privacy and Disclosure 116 8 Deception in Sourcing and Presentation 136 9 Media Corruption 154 Part III: Using the Virtual World to Create a Better Physical World 171 10 Beyond Ethics: Communicating Wisely 173 Epilogue: Digital Diversity and Democracy 190 Index 197

    £23.70

  • The Relation of Childhood Physical Activity to

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Relation of Childhood Physical Activity to

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThere is a growing public health burden of inactivity in industrialized nations. In recent years, children have become increasingly inactive, leading to concomitant increases in the prevalence of being overweight and unfit. Inactivity during childhood has implications for the prevalence of several chronic diseases (e.g., obesity, type 2 diabetes) observed in adulthood. These 'adult-onset' diseases have also become more prevalent during childhood and adolescence, exacerbating the need to develop novel treatments that provide enduring benefit by altering the chronic and oftentimes debilitating course of these lifestyle diseases. Of further interest is the absence of public health concern for the effect of inactivity on brain health and cognition. It is curious that this has not emerged as a larger societal issue, given its obvious relation to childhood obesity and other inactivity-related disorders that have captured the United States and other industrialized nations. Many schools have mTable of ContentsABSTRACT VII I. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE RELATION OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY TO COGNITIVE AND BRAIN HEALTH, AND SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENTCharles H. Hillman 1 II. PHYSICAL ACTIVITY: MEASUREMENT AND BEHAVIORAL PATTERNS IN CHILDREN AND YOUTHThomas R. Wójcicki and Edward McAuley 7 III. THE IMPORTANCE OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND AEROBIC FITNESS FOR COGNITIVE CONTROL AND MEMORY IN CHILDRENLaura Chaddock-Heyman, Charles H. Hillman, Neal J. Cohen, and Arthur F. Kramer 25 IV. THE COGNITIVE IMPLICATIONS OF OBESITY AND NUTRITION IN CHILDHOODNaiman A. Khan, Lauren B. Raine, Sharon M. Donovan, and Charles H. Hillman 51 V. THE DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION OF ADIPOSITY AND FITNESS WITH COGNITIVE CONTROL IN PREADOLESCENT CHILDRENMatthew B. Pontifex, Keita Kamijo, Mark R. Scudder, Lauren B. Raine, Naiman A. Khan, Bonnie Hemrick, Ellen M. Evans, Darla M. Castelli, Kenneth A. Frank, and Charles H. Hillman 72 VI. THE ROLE OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY IN REDUCING BARRIERS TO LEARNING IN CHILDREN WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS Matthew B. Pontifex, Jodene G. Fine, Katelin da Cruz, Andrew C. Parks, and Alan L. Smith 93 VII. THE HISTORY OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE RESEARCH: INFORMING THE FUTUREDarla M.Castelli, Erin E. Centeio, Jungyun Hwang, Jeanne M. Barcelona, Elizabeth M. Glowacki, Hannah G. Calvert, and Hildi M. Nicksic 119 VIII. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS OF THE RESEARCH ON PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND CHILDHOOD COGNITIVE AND BRAIN HEALTHCharles H. Hillman 149 COMMENTARY MECHANISMS AND CORRELATES OF A HEALTHY BRAIN: A COMMENTARYCarol L. Cheatham 153 CONTRIBUTORS 166 STATEMENT OF EDITORIAL POLICY 171 SUBJECT INDEX 173 AUTHOR INDEX 185

    1 in stock

    £33.20

  • A Companion to Latin American Anthropology

    Wiley-Blackwell A Companion to Latin American Anthropology

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    10 in stock

    £51.52

  • Studies in Fetal Behavior

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Studies in Fetal Behavior

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisAmong the earliest volumes of this monograph series was a report by Lester Sontag and colleagues, of the esteemed Fels Institute, on the heart rate of the human fetus as an expression of the developing nervous system. Here, some 75 years later, we commemorate this work and provide historical and contemporary context on knowledge regarding fetal development, as well as results from our own research. These are based on synchronized monitoring of maternal and fetal parameters assessed between 24 and 36 weeks gestation on 740 maternal-fetal pairs compiled from eight separate longitudinal studies, which commenced in the early 1990s. Data include maternal heart rate, respiratory sinus arrhythmia, and electrodermal activity and fetal heart rate, motor activity, and their integration. Hierarchical linear modeling of developmental trajectories reveals that the fetus develops in predictable ways consistent with advancing parasympathetic regulation. Findings also include: within-fetus stability (Table of ContentsABSTRACT vii I FETAL DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH IN CONTEXT: SEVENTY-FIVE YEARS OF INFLUENCE OF THE FELS LONGITUDINAL STUDY 1 II. WHY STUDY THE FETUS? 3 III. METHODS TO MONITOR THE FETUS 11 IV. DESCRIPTION OF OUR RESEARCH PROGRAM 14 V. FETAL HEART RATE AND VARIABILITY 23 VI. FETAL MOTOR ACTIVITY 33 VII. INTEGRATION OF FETAL MOVEMENT AND FETAL HEART RATE 43 VIII. THE MATERNAL CONTEXT 50 IX. SEX DIFFERENCES IN FETAL DEVELOPMENT 59 X. SIBLINGS 66 XI. DEVIATIONS FROM NORMAL DEVELOPMENT 71 XII. GENERAL DISCUSSION 77 XIII. FETAL NEUROBEHAVIORAL RESEARCH REIMAGINED 84 REFERENCES 95 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 113 COMMENTARIES STORY AND HISTORY IN FETAL BEHAVIOR 114 Karen Brakke MYSTERIES OF THE HUMAN FETUS REVEALED 124 Curt A. Sandman CONTRIBUTORS 138 STATEMENT OF EDITORIAL POLICY 140 SUBJECT INDEX 142

    10 in stock

    £32.25

  • Moving Through Adolescence

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Moving Through Adolescence

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsI. INTRODUCTION: MOVING THROUGH ADOLESCENCE: DEVELOPMENTALTRAJECTORIES OF AFRICAN AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN AMERICAN YOUTHLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 7 II. METHODLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 29 III. PRELIMINARY ANALYSES AND ANALYTIC PLANLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 54 IV. PSYCHOLOGICAL WELL-BEINGLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 70 V. R/E IDENTITY AND DISCRIMINATIONLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 83 VI. ACADEMIC FUNCTIONINGLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 95 VII. PROBLEM BEHAVIORSLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 106 VIII. FAMILY CHARACTERISTICSLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 114 IX. PEER CHARACTERISTICSLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 124 X. INTEGRATIVE SUMMARYLeslie Morrison Gutman, Stephen C. Peck, Oksana Malanchuk, Arnold J. Sameroff, and Jacquelynne S. Eccles 133 REFERENCES 143 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 166 COMMENTARY COMMENTARY ON "MOVING THROUGH ADOLESCENCE: DEVELOPMENTAL TRAJECTORIES OF AFRICAN AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN AMERICAN YOUTH"Judith G. Smetana 167 CONTRIBUTORS 178 STATEMENT OF EDITORIAL POLICY 180 SUBJECT INDEX 182

    10 in stock

    £33.20

  • Taking Sides Clashing Views in Health and Society

    McGraw-Hill Education Taking Sides Clashing Views in Health and Society

    Book SynopsisThe Taking Sides Collection on McGraw-Hill Create includes current controversial issues in a debate-style format designed to stimulate student interest and develop critical thinking skills. This Collection contains a multitude of current and classic issues to enhance and customize your course. You can browse the entire Taking Sides Collection on Create or you can search by topic, author, or keywords. Each Taking Sides issue is thoughtfully framed with Learning Outcomes, an Issue Summary, an Introduction, and an "Exploring the Issue" section featuring Critical Thinking and Reflection, Is There Common Ground?, Additional Resources, and Internet References. Go to the Taking Sides Collection on McGraw-Hill Create at www.mcgrawhillcreate.com/takingsides and click on "Explore this Collection" to browse the entire Collection. Select individual Taking Sides issues to enhance your course, or acceTable of ContentsUnit 1: Health and SocietyIssue: Should the U.S. Adopt a Single-Price Health Care?Yes: Paul S. Hewitt and Phillip Longman, from “The Case for Single-Price Health Care,” Washington Monthly (2018)No: Adam Barsouk, from “The Case Against Single-Payer Health Care,” In Training: Stories from Tomorrow’s Physicians (2018)Economic advisor to the Council for Affordable Health Coverage Paul S. Hewitt and senior editor of Washington Monthly Phillip Longman maintain that by making Medicare access universal, the United States could solve its health care cost and access crisis. Adam Barsouk, currently a medical student at Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Jefferson University, argues that the increase in taxes to fund universal coverage would negatively impact economic growth and development.Issue: Are Vaccines Safe and Beneficial?Yes: Stephen M. Perle, from “War Without End: The Case for Vaccination,” Chiropractic Economics (2017)No: Timothy Perenich, from “We Are Not Told…The Case against Vaccination,” Chiropractic Economics (2017)Professor and chiropractor Stephen M. Perle believes that the evidence is incontrovertible that vaccines are beneficial. Chiropractor Timothy Perenich disagrees and claims that many vaccines have harmful side effects and are not totally effective in preventing disease.Unit 2: Mind-Body RelationshipsIssue: Should Addiction to Drugs Be Labeled a Brain Disease?Yes: Alan I. Leshner, from “Addiction Is a Brain Disease,” The Addiction Recovery Guide (2016)No: Steven Slate, from “Addiction Is Not a Brain Disease, It Is a Choice,” The Clean Slate (2016)Alan I. Leshner, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health, believes that addiction to drugs and alcohol is not a behavioral condition but a treatable disease. Addiction theorist Steven Slate counters that addiction is a personal choice and cannot be considered a brain disease.Issue: Is the Use of “Smart” Pills for Cognitive Enhancement Dangerous?Yes: Alan Schwarz, from “Drowned in a Stream of Prescriptions,” The New York Times (2013)No: Phil Taylor, from “Think Positive: The Rise of ‘Smart Drugs,’” PMLive (2013)Pulitzer Prize–nominated reporter Alan Schwartz maintains that “smart pills” such as Adderall can significantly improve the lives of children and others with ADHD but that too many young adults who do not have the condition fake the symptoms and get prescriptions for the highly addictive and dangerous drug. Journalist Phil Taylor disagrees and claims that smart drugs are safe and effective in boosting cognition.Unit 3: Sexuality and Gender IssuesIssue: Does Alcohol Consumption Increase the Risk for Breast Cancer?Yes: Stephanie Mencimer, from “Bottled Up,” Mother Jones (2018)No: Gary Schwitzer, from “Today’s Alcohol and Breast Cancer Headlines Are Wrong: Here’s How News Reports Could Have Done Better,” Health News Review (2017)Reporter and breast cancer survivor Stephanie Mencimer believes that drinking may have caused her cancer but that the alcohol industry worked hard to downplay the risk. Publisher and journalist Gary Schwitzer argues that there is no conclusive proof that alcohol causes breast cancer as most of the studies are observational.Issue: Does Watching Pornography Lead to Sexual Dysfunction?Yes: Philip Zimbardo, Gary Wilson, and Nikita Coulombe, from “How Porn Is Messing with Your Manhood,” Skeptic (2016)No: Marty Klein, from “Skeptical of the Porn Skeptics,” Skeptic (2016)Psychologist Philip Zimbardo and writers Gary Wilson and Nikita Coulombe argue that watching pornography, especially by young men, can lead to sexual dysfunction with a partner. Sex therapist Marty Klein counters that while young men may be getting some wrong ideas about sex from porn, they don’t appear to suffer sexual dysfunction.Issue: Should Embryos Produced During IVF Be Considered Children?Yes: Thomas Brejcha et al., from “Brief of Amici Curiae Missouri Right to Life, Lawyers for Life, and American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists,” Gadberry v. McQueen, Missouri Court of Appeals (2015)No: Joseph J. Kodner and John M. Faust, from “Brief of Amicus Curiae American Society for Reproductive Medicine in Support of Respondent,” Gadberry v. McQueen, Missouri Court of Appeals (2016)In a friend-of-the-court brief submitted in a recent case in Missouri involving a dispute over embryos that a couple had put into storage, lawyers for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine argue that embryos are not persons and that treating them as such would have a profound negative effect on people who seek medical assistance in building their families. In a friend-of-the-court brief on the other side of the same case, lawyers representing several organizations that are opposed to abortion argue that science proves straightforwardly that embryos are persons and that the embryos in the Missouri custody dispute should be given to the parent who seeks to take care of them.Issue: Is Gene-Editing of Human Embryos Coming Soon?Yes: Antonio Regalado, from “Engineering the Perfect Baby,” MIT Technology Review (2015)No: Elizabeth McNally, from “Testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, Subcommittee on Research and Technology, Hearing on ‘The Science and Ethics of Genetically Engineered Human DNA,’” U.S. House of Representatives (2015)Antonio Regalado describes recent progress in using the new CRISPR technology to edit the genes of mammalian cells, including embryos. He argues that although many people involved in the research are cautious, what was until recently only a theoretical possibility is now a very real possibility. We are very close to being able to engineer the genes of human embryos (for a variety of reasons), and most people have no idea of what is coming. Elizabeth McNally agrees that the technology is developing rapidly and has much to offer but is more reserved in her evaluation. She argues that it is necessary to regulate the technology and its uses, including limiting or prohibiting uses where changes would be passed to the next generation. However, “the justified use of this approach is certainly conceivable and may one day be appropriate.”Unit 4: Public Health IssuesIssue: Will Hydraulic Fracturing (Fracking) Negatively Affect Human Health and the Environment?Yes: John Rumpler, from “Fracking: Pro and Con,” Tufts Now (2013)No: Bruce McKenzie Everett, from “Fracking: Pro and Con,” Tufts Now (2013)Environmentalist and senior attorney for Environment America John Rumpler argues that fracking is not worth the damage to health and the environment. Energy researcher and adjunct professor Bruce McKenzie Everett claims fracking provides substantial economic benefits and its health and environmental problems are relatively small.Issue: Can Vaccines Cause Autism?Yes: Arjun Walia, from “Scientific Evidence Suggests the Vaccine-Autism Link Can No Longer Be Ignored,” Collective Evolution (2013)No: Harriet Hall, from “Vaccines and Autism: A Deadly Manufactroversy,” Skeptic (2009)Arjun Walia argues that the scientific consensus on the safety of vaccines may be suspect because “the corporate media is owned by the major vaccine manufacturers.” He describes 22 studies that suggest that the connection between childhood vaccines and autism is real or that suggest possible mechanisms for the connection. Harriet Hall argues that the controversy over whether vaccines cause autism has been manufactured by dishonest, self-serving researchers and physicians, ignorant celebrities, conspiracy theorists, and the media. The result is a resurgence of preventable diseases and childhood deaths. Vaccines save lives. Autism’s causes are probably genetic.Issue: Should Genetically Engineered Mosquitoes Be Released into the Environment to Fight Disease?Yes: Hadyn Parry, from “Testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, Hearing on ‘Science of Zika: The DNA of an Epidemic,’” U.S. House of Representatives (2016)No: Eric Hoffman, from “Genetically Engineered Mosquitoes in the U.S.,” Friends of the Earth (2012)Hadyn Parry argues that genetically engineered mosquitoes hold the potential to reduce mosquito populations and control the spread of diseases such as Zika and dengue. Eric Hoffman, a biotechnology campaigner with Friends of the Earth, argues that a great deal of research remains to be done to prove the safety to both the environment and public health of releasing genetically engineered mosquitoes. In addition, medical ethics require that participants in a medical trial must be able to opt out at any time, which means that a single resident of a release area must be able to call a halt to the release program.Unit 5: Consumer HealthIssue: Does Obesity Increase the Risk of Premature Death?Yes: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, from “As Overweight and Obesity Increase, So Does Risk of Dying Prematurely,” Harvard T.H. Chan S chool of Public Health (2016)No: Harriet Brown, from “The Weight of the Evidence,” Medical Examiner (2015)The editors of the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health argue that being overweight or obese is clearly associated with a higher risk of dying prematurely than being normal weight. Writer Harriet Brown maintains that obese individuals with chronic diseases fare better and live longer than those of normal weight.Issue: Are Restrictions on Sugar and Sugary Beverages Justified?Yes: Nick Gillespie, from “The Man Who Hated Carbs Before It Was Cool,” Reason (2018)No: Kenneth W. Krause, from “Saving Us from Sweets: This Is Science and Government on Sugar,” Skeptical Inquirer (2012)Writer Nick Gillespie interviewed science writer Gary Taubes who maintains that added sugars and sweeteners pose dangers to health and contribute to majors diseases such as diabetes and heart disease. Journalist Kenneth W. Krause argues that individuals have the ability to make decisions about sugar consumption themselves and that government should not restrict our access to sugar and sugar-containing food products.Issue: Does Early Introduction of Food Reduce the Risk of Food Allergy?Yes: Debra J. Palmer and Susan L. Prescott, from “Early Introduction of Food Reduces Food Allergy – Pro,” Pediatric Allergy & Immunology (2017)No: Michael R. Perkin, from “Early Introduction of Food Reduces Food Allergy – Con,” Pediatric Allergy & Immunology (2017)Professors Debra J. Palmer and Susan L. Prescott maintain that infants should be fed ‘more allergenic’ foods such as peanuts to help prevent the development of food allergies. Researcher Michael R. Perkin disagrees and claims that the research on benefits of early introduction of allergenic foods is limited and inconclusive.Issue: Should Genetically Modified Foods Be Labeled?Yes: Todd Daloz, from “Testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Health, Hearing on ‘A National Framework for the Review and Labeling of Biotechnology in Food,’” U.S. House of Representatives (2015)No: L. Val Giddings, from “Testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Health, Hearing on ‘A National Framework for the Review and Labeling of Biotechnology in Food,’” U.S. House of Representatives (2015)Todd Daloz argues that Vermont’s legislation requiring labeling of genetically modified crops (GMOs) is amply justified by the public’s need for factual information about the food they eat and that federal preemption of state labeling laws, without providing a suitable substitute, is unreasonable. L. Val Giddings argues that there is no scientific doubt that GMO crops are safe to eat, the federal government already has sufficient authority to regulate the sale and labeling of GMO foods, and the push for labeling laws is a thinly disguised effort to ban GMOs in favor of less safe and more expensive alternatives such as organic foods.

    £80.61

  • Land

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Land

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisLand draws upon a transdisciplinary doctoral thesis that reviewed the evolution of Anglo-Australian land law and fiscal practice following the decline of feudalism and the enshrinement of individual profit seeking in a capitalist economy.Table of ContentsFrontispiece. Foreword. Preface. 1. The Subversion of Reason. 2. Institutionalized Profiteering. 3. The Diversion of Investment. 4. The Employment Mirage. 5. Fiscal Masochism. 6. Resourcing Public Revenue. 7. Underpinning a Global Morality. 8. The Essential Requirements. 9. Impediments and Counter-Arguments. 10. Henry George Re-Visited. 11. Apathy, Cupidity or Conspiracy?. 12. The Enduring Enigma. Postscript. References. Autobiographical Sketch of Phillip Denny Day (1924-). Index.

    10 in stock

    £94.88

  • Natural Resources Taxation and Regulation

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Natural Resources Taxation and Regulation

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis* highlights the historical evolution of land and forestry management policies among the developed nations and especially in the United States. * 14 essays that scope out major landmarks that exist in natural resource economics * Wide ranging in its inclusion of topics and conceptualapproaches. .Table of ContentsContents. Frontspiece Portrait of Grover Pease Osborne. Editor's Introduction. THE IDEOLOGY OF ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCE UTILIZATION DEBATES. Newspaper Ideological Bias or "Statist Quo"?: The Acid (Rain) Test-. William L. Anderson and Jacquelynne W. McLellan. A Comparative Political Economy Approach to Farming Interest Groups in Australia and the United States-. Sean Alley and John Marangos. THE MANAGEMENT AND UTILIZATION OF LAND AND OTHER RESOURCES: OLD AND NEW. Valuing Nature: Economic Analysis and Public Land Management,1975-2000-. Robert H. Nelson. The Role of Ethnicity and Language in Contingent Valuation Analysis: A Fire Prevention Policy Application-. John Loomis, Lindsey Ellingson, Armando Gonzalez-Caban, and Andy Seidl. The Resource Economics of Grover Pease Osborne: Author of American's First Textbook on Resource Economics-. Gerald F. Vaughn. Escaping the Resource Curse and the Dutch Disease?: When and Why Norway Caught Up with and Forged Ahead of Its Neighbors-. Erling Roed Larsen. GEORGIST PERSPECTIVES ON RESOURCE UTILIZATION AND FINANCING. NonRenewable Exhaustible Resources and Property Taxation: Selected Observations-. C. Lowell Harriss. Lessons for Economic Reform Based on Pennsylvania's Experiences with the Two-Tiered Property Tax-. Robert Andrew Peters. viii The American Journal of Economics and Sociology. A Simple General Test for Tax Bias-. Mason Gaffney. Financing Transit Systems Through Value Capture: An Annotated Bibliography-. Jeffrey J. Smith and Thomas A. Gihring. RETHINKING THE CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS OF NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS. The complex Taxonomy of the Factors: Natural Resources, Human Action, and Capital Goods-. Fred E. Foldvary. Heterogeneity and Time: From Austrian Captial Theory to Ecological Economics-. Malte Faber and Ralph Winkler. Reconciling Gray and Hotelling: Lessons from Early Exhaustible Resource Economics-. Richard J. Brazee and L. Martin Cloutier. Index

    10 in stock

    £30.95

  • Intergenerational Relations

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Intergenerational Relations

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisChanging times mean that people are living longer and in more complex families. Changes include greater geographical mobility, increased racial and ethnic diversity, new patterns of immigration and identity reformulation, and changing work and family roles. With governmental resources decreasing, it is especially important to understand the changing nature of multigenerational family structures, functioning, and roles in individual well-being in order to maximize the effectiveness of informal and formal supports available. This issue examines factors that facilitate anticipating, understanding, and designing support programs to meet the challenges facing individuals in all generation positions, families, and communities in the U.S. and around the world.Table of ContentsINTRODUCTION. Intergenerational Relations: Theory, Research, and Policy (Toni C. Antonucci, James S. Jackson, and Simon Biggs). THEORY AND METHODS. Thinking about Generations: Conceptual Positions and Policy Implications (Simon Biggs). Crossing Age and Generational Boundaries: Exploring Intergenerational Research Encounters (Amanda M. Grenier). Age Cohort, Ancestry, and Immigrant Generation Influences in Family Relations and Psychological Well-Being among Black Caribbean Family Members (James S. Jackson, Ivy Forsythe-Brown, and Ishtar O. Govia). GENERATIONAL INFLUENCES ON WELL-BEING. Health Disparities and Arab-American Elders: Does Intergenerational Support Buffer the Inequality–Health Link? (Kristine J. Ajrouch). Generational Structure and Social Resources in Mid-Life: Influences on Health and Well-Being (Jessica M. McIlvane, Kristine J. Ajrouch, and Toni C. Antonucci). Capturing the Complexity of Intergenerational Relations: Exploring Ambivalence within Later-Life Families (Karl Pillemer, J. Jill Suitor, Steven E. Mock, Myra Sabir, Tamara B. Pardo, and Jori Sechrist). Relationships with Grandparents and the Emotional Well-Being of Late Adolescent and Young Adult Grandchildren (Sarah A. Ruiz and Merril Silverstein). GENERATIONAL INFLUENCES ON CAREGIVING. Marital History and Intergenerational Solidarity: The Impact of Divorce and Unmarried Cohabitation (Svein Olav Daatland). Intergenerational Relations with In-Laws in the Context of the Social Convoy: Theoretical and Practical Implications (Jennifer D. Santos and Mary J. Levitt). Family Disruption and Support in Later Life: A Comparative Study Between the United Kingdom and Italy (Cecilia Tomassini, Karen Glaser, and Rachel Stuchbury). Reciprocity in Parent–Child Exchange and Life Satisfaction among the Elderly: A Cross-National Perspective (Ariela Lowenstein, Ruth Katz, and Nurit Gur-Yaish). CONCLUSION. Intergenerational Relations: Themes, Prospects, and Possibilities (Philip R. Costanzo and Melanie B. Hoy). 2006 KURT LEWIN AWARD ADDRESS. Introduction to Gregory M. Herek’s Lewin Award Address (Faye J. Crosby). Confronting Sexual Stigma and Prejudice: Theory and Practice (Gregory M. Herek)

    10 in stock

    £36.95

© 2026 Book Curl

    • American Express
    • Apple Pay
    • Diners Club
    • Discover
    • Google Pay
    • Maestro
    • Mastercard
    • PayPal
    • Shop Pay
    • Union Pay
    • Visa

    Login

    Forgot your password?

    Don't have an account yet?
    Create account