The Real Estate Learner’s Guide
For students of real estate, this reference book assembles fundamental concepts and terms about what can be done on, to, and with land. With directions for further reading, it aids learning and prepares students for a career in land, property, and valuation.
This second volume on Grotta Mora Cavorso presents multidisciplinary analyses of the cave’s Neolithic occupation. Discover one of the largest collective burial caves in the Mediterranean, revealing its complex and multi-layered use as a ritual place in central Italy.
Whistleblowing and Whistleblowers in Africa
This book examines whistleblowing’s crucial role in combating corruption in Africa. Drawing on case studies and lived experiences from across the continent, it provides deep insights into the challenges whistleblowers face and the mechanisms for promoting accountability.
The Hidden People of Uganda
Weaving historical analysis with harrowing personal testimony, this book uncovers the hidden realities of Uganda’s brutal civil war—from child abduction and mass displacement to the lasting shadows of violence still cast today.
The Self, the Other and the World
This book examines Joseph Conrad’s narratives and the protagonists’ confrontation with alterity—the self, the other, and the external world. It uniquely links Conradian ethics to the thought of Emmanuel Levinas, arguing that the meeting with the Other determines self-knowledge.
Museums as Places of People, Time, and Memory
Museums are more than custodians of the past. This book explores how they navigate social change and technological innovation to foster inclusivity and representation, offering insights into their evolving role as active spaces of dialogue, learning, and social change.
How Human Nature Fosters Violence, War and Genocide
Why are we the way we are? This book examines mass violence and genocide, arguing it builds upon a basic human tendency from our evolutionary background to support our own group and kill those considered “others,” often hiding behind designations of religion, race, or ethnicity.
Access and the Making of Mass Higher Education
This book explains the growth of Access to Higher Education, pivoting between the 1970s and today. Comparing Britain and Australia, it examines how hierarchies create new inequalities. Access is a hope that lives on, as long as people demand and support it for a better future.
Inclusive marketing allows brands to connect with diverse audiences, build identity, and foster equality. Grounded in research, this book combines theory, case studies, and expert insights to explore practical strategies that benefit both businesses and society.
A bold examination of religion and power in Pakistan. This study challenges extremist narratives that restrict freedoms and enforce harsh rules. It gives voice to communities trapped between faith and fear, aiming to restore Islam as a force for dignity, empowerment, and peace.
A working manual for design and process engineers, this book offers analytical solutions and process optimization for impurity diffusion in silicon, gallium arsenide, and other semiconductor materials used in the fabrication of microelectronics devices and microsystems.
The British Sovereign Base Areas in the Island of Cyprus
Due to its strategic position, Cyprus has always been a prize for great powers. This book examines Britain’s long historical link to the island, focusing on the unique sovereign military bases retained after independence. How were they established and how do they function?
This book reviews chlorine substitution reactions in hexachlorocyclopentadiene. It shows new, convenient ways of synthesizing block synthons for the rational design of pharmacologically important cyclopentanoids and other economically valuable compounds. For synthetic chemists.
Time and space in fiction are not given; they are built. This book reveals how figurative language actively constructs narrative worlds, reshaping our understanding of human experience and cultural imagination.
Postcolonialism and African Women’s Identity
This book explores African women’s identity in Buchi Emecheta’s novel Second-Class Citizen from a feminist viewpoint. It critically analyzes how hybridity, race, and gender roles shape narratives of resistance, internalized oppression, and the struggle for selfhood.
Ginger, a doll molded from soil, gives voice to the world under our feet. Her story shows soil is more than “earth”—it is memory, sustenance and history. In this journey where science meets adventure, you will learn to see the ground you walk on with new eyes.
American Diplomacy During the Gwangju Uprising
This study explores a failure of the Carter administration during South Korea’s 1980 Gwangju Uprising. As hundreds of citizens were murdered by the military, the US failed to intervene, instead pursuing trade deals and creating an unresolved diplomatic failure.
Collaboration, Exchange and Transformation in Literary and Cultural Practices
This collection of essays focuses on the transformational potential of intercultural conversations. Through respectful dialogue, we can resist narrow conceptions of history and identity, and instead forge new, exciting and transcendent modes of being.
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