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  • by Rebecca Lemoine
    £37.49

    In Plato's Caves, Rebecca LeMoine defends the bold thesis that Plato was a friend of cultural diversity, contrary to many contemporary perceptions. LeMoine shows that, across Plato's dialogues, foreigners play a role similar to that of Socrates: liberating citizens from intellectual bondage. Through close readings of four Platonic dialogues--Republic, Menexenus, Laws, and Phaedrus--LeMoine recovers Plato's unique insight into the promise, and risk, of cross-cultural engagement.

  • by Frank I Michelman
    £106.99

    In Constitutional Essentials: On the Constitutional Theory of Political Liberalism, Michelman explains why constitutional debates persist in modern day democracies. Through the lens of John Rawls' seminal work Political Liberalism, Michelman responds to the problems governments of constitutional-democratic societies face from deep-lying disagreement among citizens by presenting them with Rawls' solution: an accepted constitution.

  • by Leen Decin
    £93.99

    The prime parameter determining the evolution of a star is its mass. Any modification to the stellar mass has large repercussions on its evolutionary path. Both low-mass and massive stars are known to power strong stellar winds at the end of their lives. These winds determine the type of the stellar end product and the amount by which these stars contribute to the chemical enrichment of the interstellar medium, ultimately providing the building blocks of planets and life. A proper understanding of stellar evolution and the building blocks in the Universe cannot be achieved without a detailed understanding of stellar winds. IAU Symposium 366 provides an overview of state-of-the-art observational and theoretical studies on the origin of winds in low-mass and massive evolved stars, with topics including binarity, enrichment of the interstellar medium, astrochemistry, and theoretical, observational and numerical constraints on stellar outflows.

  • by Jorge G Castañedaa
    £19.99

    America through Foreign Eyes is written for Americans by a foreigner who has lived, studied, worked and dealt with America for half a century. In these pages, Jorge G. Castañeda seeks to reflect upon some of the more salient features of the country. He considers the observations of other foreigners, from Dickens to Naipaul, and identifies aspects of the U.S. that were not touched upon by these authors. As a former Foreign Minister of Mexico, Castañeda brings a different viewpoint to issues ranging from purported American exceptionalism, uniformity, race and religion, culture, immigration, and the death penalty. Ultimately, he describes the United States' arduous and successful road to modernity, and the construction of what can justly be called an American civilization.

  • by David S Clark
    £126.99

    This book details both the intellectual and social history of American legal rules, institutions, ideology, and culture that had a foreign component, either by import or after 1900 also by export from the United States to other legal systems. Combining legal history and comparative law, the volume proceeds chronologically through seven historical periods beginning with the religious and cultural diversity that existed in the 13 British colonies and its relevance for legal development to the twentieth century, which saw sustained scholarly comparative law.

  • by Solene (Professor of Law Rowan
    £46.49 - 109.49

  • Save 19%
    by Iwan Rhys Morus
    £12.49

    The Oxford History of Science offers readers an accessible and entertaining introduction to the history of science as well as a valuable and authoritative reference work.

  • by Melvin Delgado
    £28.49

    The Silent Epidemic of Gun Injuries explains the effects of injuries from gun violence in the United States. Through case studies and statistics, Melvin Delgado explores the physical and emotional effects of gun injuries as well as their social, cultural, and economic impact on communities. Further, he explains how communities and social work professionals can respond to the epidemic of gun injuries.

  • by Michael Ruse
    £15.49 - 39.99

  • by Hallvard Lillehammer
    £27.49 - 72.49

  • by Lisa Dellmuth
    £72.49

    "This book focuses on how contestation among elites shapes the legitimacy of international organizations in the eyes of citizens. It offers fresh insights into major issues of our day, such as the rise of populism, the power of communication, the backlash against global governance, and the relationship between citizens and elites"--

  • by Daisy Cheung
    £91.49

    "The ideas behind this book were shaped by an international conference organised by the editors and held online between 30 September and 2 October 2020"--ECIP acknowledgements.

  • by David K Androff
    £60.49

    Refugee Solutions in the Age of Global Crisis tackles the world's three main policies for addressing refugee crises -- voluntary repatriation, local integration, and third country resettlement. These policies were set up by the UN in the aftermath of World War II, and they have not been updated since. In fact, they have been slowly breaking down. Using detailed contemporary case studies, this book analyzes these policies from a social work perspective, with special attention to human rights, integration, and sustainable development.

  • by Augustine Nwoye
    £77.99

    This book aims to serve as a foundational text in the emerging field of African psychology, which centers the knowledges and experience of continental African realities and postcolonial concerns in psychology. Drawing from the author's key essays as a leading thinker in the field, African Psychology: The Emergence of a Tradiiton describes this discipline's meaning and scope, as well as its epistemological and theoretical perspectives.

  • by Aikau, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark & Aimee Craft
    £26.99

  • by Leo Panitch, Carlo Fanelli & Bryan Evans
    £24.99 - 63.49

  • by Ugur UEmit (Associate Professor of History UEngoer
    £24.49 - 38.49

  • by Sonia Alconini
    £46.49

    The Oxford Handbook of the Incas aims to be the first comprehensive book on the Inca, the largest empire in the pre-Columbian world. Using archaeology, ethnohistory and art history, the central goal of this handbook is to bring together recent research conducted by experts from different fields that study the Inca empire, from its origins and expansion to its demise and continuing influence in contemporary times.

  • by R Barker Bausell
    £36.49

    Recent events have vividly underscored the societal importance of science, yet the majority of the public are unaware that a large proportion of published scientific results are simply wrong. The Problem with Science explains in nontechnical language how such fallacy occurs, how it gets published in respected scientific journals, and how it can largely be avoided.

  • by T. A. Moorman
    £7.49

    As a cursed vampire born with no fangs, going to a class called Feeding 101 is pretty much pointless. If you ask me most of our courses in Be Prepared Academy are pointless. They're meant to teach us how to blend in with humans .Even though we live in a realm without humans. But, as fate would have it, I was getting ready to eat those words. A wizard hell bent on misplaced revenge kidnaps me and my friends and sends us with a one-way ticket to Detroit, Michigan to a time when the tension amongst the races is at its highest. And having to deal with race issues is the one thing that has never even been so much as a thought to any of us, and is the one course not on the roster. Will everything we've learned in the academy be enough to keep us alive? What will we all do when racism stares us in the face? Most importantly, how will we get back home? Guess we're about to find out.

  • by Craig Nethercott
    £254.49

    This book is the most comprehensive and authoritative practical guide to financial transactions under Islamic law. Written by a highly-experienced editor and contributor it explains the theoretical underpinnings of Islamic finance as a whole and examines in detail the major individual transaction structures in their practical context.

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    by World Health Organization
    £9.49

    The manual is complemented by the World Health Organization's (WHO) Guidelines for drinking-water quality (WHO, 2011a), which describe the principles of the WSP approach, and the Water safety plan manual: step-by-step risk management for drinking-water suppliers (Bartram et al., 2009), a practical guide to developing WSPs for larger water supplies managed by a water utility or similar entity.

  • by Barbara M Tagg
    £42.99

  • by Ethan Meltzer
    £48.99

    How to Think Like a Neurologist flips the neurology educational narrative on its head and attempts to lift the veil of neurophobia to show how neurologists use critical thinking and clinical reasoning to diagnose neurologic diseases. Whereas most case-based textbooks focus on the diseases of the cases themselves, the intent of the book is to teach the process, not the end result. By the end of the book, readers will be empowered with a foundation they can apply in their own clinical practice.

  • by Helen M Greenwald
    £47.49

    The Oxford Handbook of Opera offers a series of trenchant, cutting-edge, and previously unpublished essays on the most important and compelling issues confronting those who think and write about opera. The handbook emphasizes not only operas themselves, but such broad concerns of the discipline as genre, voice, national style, performance, censorship, staging, film, editions, and aesthetics.

  • by Naomi Baron
    £16.99

    Readers of all ages, especially those in school, use learning materials in print, on digital screens, and increasingly with audio. While the words may be the same, research shows important differences in the way we concentrate, understand, and remember with these three media. In How We Read Now, linguist and reading expert Naomi Baron presents cutting-edge research on reading media and offers practical strategies for maximizing success with each format.

  • by Paul P Rega
    £46.99

    Disaster medicine has occupied an increasingly important niche within the specialty of emergency medicine over the latter half of the 20th century. Regardless of whether an event was natural, anthropogenic, or a combination of both, emergency medicine was and is the ideal discipline to develop the human resources, the strategies, the tactics, and the evidence-based research to elevate the field of disaster medicine. To confront recent events-including sectarian violence, wars, genocide, migration, terrorism, emerging infectious diseases, and pandemics-there first needs to be a knowledge of disaster medicine and disaster management at its most basic level. The intent of this book is to introduce these concepts using diverse viewpoints and scenarios.

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