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Politics

Here you will find exciting books about Politics. Below is a selection of over 171.926 books on the subject.
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  • Save 24%
    by Simon Hall
    £18.99

    From the streets of Petrograd during the heady autumn of 1917, to Mao's stunning victory in October 1949, and Fidel's triumphant arrival in Havana, in January 1959, the history of the twentieth century was transformed in dramatic and profound ways by the Russian, Chinese and Cuban revolutions.Here, the stories of these epoch-defining events are told together for the first time. At the heart of each revolution was an epic journey: Lenin's 1917 return to Russia from exile in Switzerland; Mao's 'Long March' of 1934-35, covering some 6,000 miles across China; and Fidel Castro's return to Cuba in 1956 following his exile in Mexico. Told in tandem with these are the corresponding journeys of three extraordinary journalists - John Reed, Edgar Snow and Herbert L. Matthews - whose electric testimony from the frontlines would make a decisive contribution to how these revolutions were understood in the wider world. Together, these six journeys changed the course of the twentieth century. Here, in Simon Hall's masterful retelling, these exhilarating events are brought vividly to life. Featuring a stellar cast, extraordinary drama and an epic sweep, Three Revolutions raises fundamental questions about the nature of political power, the limits of idealism and the role of the journalist - questions that remain of utmost urgency today.

  • by George (Flinders University Crowder
    £38.49 - 132.99

  • Save 23%
    by Alison Kervin
    £15.49

  • Save 23%
    by Margaret Roberts
    £16.99

  • Save 19%
    by Stephen Breen
    £12.99

  • - Environment and Strategy
    by USA) Kshetri & Nir (University of North Carolina Greensboro
    £56.49 - 132.99

    Revised edition of the author's Global entrepreneurship, 2014.

  • by Marjaana Jauhola
    £132.99

    This book offers a critical contribution to feminist peace and disaster research by challenging the successful disaster recovery narrative of the Kachchh 2001 earthquake in Gujarat, India.

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    £209.49

    The Routledge Handbook of Autocratization in Southeast Asia examines how global and domestic forces of autocratization affect regional and local politics.

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    £132.99

    To help managers navigate dualities and contradictions in their organizations, Management, Organizations, and Paradoxes presents a comprehensive overview of implementing the paradox theory from a distinct organizational standpoint in the Central and Eastern European (CEE) context.

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    £132.99

    Based around pedagogical theory and concrete practical examples and experiences from the classroom, the book contributes with a multiplicity of knowledge to the growing appetite for interdisciplinary initiatives at universities.

  • Save 23%
    by Nathan Waddell
    £16.99

  • by Shauna (Rutgers University) L. Shames
    £18.49 - 54.99

  • by Sam Goncalves
    £7.49

    We often think of 'making a difference' as an individual endeavour, a hero's journey. Popular movements and protests have proliferated in the many crises of the last few years. Some expressions of change are deemed too weak, others too disruptive: from Instagram tiles to orange spray paint. This book spends time with three prominent movements across environmental justice, land reform, and a fight for rent controls, seeking to recalibrate activist thinking from the individual responsibility to the collective by asking, truly: how does change happen?

  • by Edward H. Carpenter
    £27.49

  • by Henry (Arizona State University) Thomson
    £29.49

  • by Stephen Legg
    £114.99

  • Save 23%
    by Monica Feria-Tinta
    £16.99

    'Can a planet have legal rights? Could it be defended in a court of law?' A revolution is taking place. Around the world, ordinary people are turning to courts seeking justice for environmental damage. At the forefront of this movement, pioneering barrister Monica Feria-Tinta advocates not only for the people fighting for their homes and livelihoods, but also for those who have no voice: for rivers, forests and endangered species. In A Barrister for the Earth, Monica takes us behind the scenes of ten real cases - as she argues against the destruction of cloud forests in the world's first Rights of Nature case, to holding Sovereign states to account for inaction in addressing climate change in a landmark win for the Torres Strait Islanders. Each of these hopeful stories are landmarks signalling that we are at an important juncture, in which the law can be a powerful tool for the lasting change that we need.

  • Save 26%
    by Tomas Rothaus
    £19.99

  • by Lala (University of Southampton) Muradova
    £18.49 - 54.99

  • Save 14%
    by Brody Mullins
    £9.49

  • by Justin F. Jackson
    £28.49

    In 1898, on the eve of the Spanish-American War, the US Army seemed minuscule and ill-equipped for global conflict. Yet over the next fifteen years, its soldiers defeated Spain and pacified nationalist insurgencies in both Cuba and the Philippines. Despite their lack of experience in colonial administration, American troops also ruled and transformed the daily lives of the 8 million people who inhabited these tropical islands.How was this relatively small and inexperienced army able to wage wars in Cuba and the Philippines and occupy them? American soldiers depended on tens of thousands of Cubans and Filipinos, both for military operations and civil government. Whether compelled to labor for free or voluntarily working for wages, Cubans and Filipinos, suspended between civilian and soldier status, enabled the making of a new US overseas empire by interpreting, guiding, building, selling sex, and many other kinds of work for American troops. In The Work of Empire, Justin Jackson reveals how their labor forged the politics, economics, and culture of American colonialism in Cuba and the Philippines and left an enduring imprint on these islands and the US Army itself. Jackson offers new ways to understand the rise of American military might and how it influenced a globalizing imperial world.

  • by Nicholas (Belmont University) Norman-Krause
    £92.49

    This richly textured book helps students and scholars of religion and politics to understand the surprising ways in which conflict and conciliation can renew grassroots democracy. It appraises contemporary discussions of democratic pluralism in religious and ethical theory while advancing a bold new account of conflict's religious significance.

  • by Julie (University of Toronto) Moreau
    £29.99 - 93.99

  • Save 26%
    by Heidi Boghosian
    £19.99

  • by Gregory W. (University of Tokyo) Noble
    £18.49 - 54.99

  • by Daniel (University of Ottawa) Stockemer
    £18.49 - 54.99

  • by Yossi Beilin
    £22.99

  • Save 12%
    by Boetie2
    £48.49

    "Government" - The Biggest Scams in History... Exposed! - How Inter-Generational Organized Crime Runs the "Government," Media, and Academia exposes an organized crime system using "government" to rob and tax farm societies.

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