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Rural Tourism New Concepts New Research New Practice

Late Ruskin: New Contexts New Contexts

New Regionalism in Australia

New Economic Spaces: New Economic Geographies

Investigating Local Knowledge New Directions New Approaches

Investigating Local Knowledge New Directions New Approaches

Originally published in 2004. Local knowledge reflects many generations of experience and problem solving by people around the world increasingly affected by globalizing forces. Such knowledge is far more sophisticated than development professionals previously assumed and as such represents an immensely valuable resource. A growing number of governments and international development agencies are recognizing that local-level knowledge and organizations offer the foundation for new participatory models of development that are both cost-effective and sustainable and ecologically and socially sound. This book provides a timely overview of new directions and new approaches to investigating the role of rural communities in generating knowledge founded on their sophisticated understandings of their environments devising mechanisms to conserve and sustain their natural resources and establishing community-based organizations that serve as forums for identifying problems and dealing with them through local-level experimentation innovation and exchange of information with other societies. These studies show that development activities that work with and through local knowledge and organizations have several important advantages over projects that operate outside them. Local knowledge informs grassroots decision-making much of which takes place through indigenous organizations and associations at the community level as people seek to identify and determine solutions to their problems. | Investigating Local Knowledge New Directions New Approaches

GBP 31.99
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Epistemic Duties New Arguments New Angles

The Politics of New Atheism

New Directions in Public Opinion

The Psychology of Negotiations in the 21st Century Workplace New Challenges and New Solutions

The New Soviet Theatre

The New Examination System - GCSE

New Drugs Fair Prices Managing the Pharmaceutical Innovation Ecosystem for Sustainable and Affordable New Medicines

New Drugs Fair Prices Managing the Pharmaceutical Innovation Ecosystem for Sustainable and Affordable New Medicines

New Drugs Fair Prices addresses the important question of how we might get the innovative new medicines we need at prices we can afford. Today this debate is impassioned but sterile. One side calls for price controls discounting their impact on investment in innovation. The other points to miraculous new therapies disregarding their affordability and social inequity. This polarized argument creates more heat than light threatening the social contract between the industry and society on which pharmaceutical innovation depends. This ground-breaking book takes a wholly new perspective on the issue and raises the debate to a more informed and productive level. Drawing on interviews with more than 70 experts across the pharmaceutical innovation world and combining a diverse literature from scientific political economic and business domains it describes how a sustainable and affordable supply of new medicines is possible only by balancing pharmaceutical innovation’s complex adaptive ecosystem. By considering how each of the ecosystem’s seven habitats work and interact with the others it makes a comprehensive set of recommendations for achieving that ecosystem balance. The core message of New Drugs Fair Prices is important to anyone who ever has needed or will ever need a medicine: we can have a sustainable supply of new medicines that are both innovative and affordable if we manage the pharmaceutical innovation ecosystem intelligently. | New Drugs Fair Prices Managing the Pharmaceutical Innovation Ecosystem for Sustainable and Affordable New Medicines

GBP 34.99
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Entrepreneurship and New Firm

Schizotypy New dimensions

Trans New Wave Cinema

The Routledge Guidebook to The New Testament

New Firms and Regional Development in Europe

New Museum Design

New Music Theatre in Europe Transformations between 1955-1975

New Music Theatre in Europe Transformations between 1955-1975

Between 1955 and 1975 music theatre became a central preoccupation for European composers digesting the consequences of the revolutionary experiments in musical language that followed the end of the Second World War. The ‘new music theatre’ wrought multiple significant transformations serving as a crucible for the experimental rethinking of theatrical traditions artistic genres the conventions of performance and the composer’s relation to society. This volume brings together leading specialists from across Europe to offer a new appraisal of the genre. It is structured according to six themes that investigate: the relation of new music theatre to earlier and contemporaneous theories of drama; the use of new technologies; the relation of new music theatre to progressive politics; the role of new venues and environments; the advancement of new conceptions of the performer; and the challenges that new music theatre lays down for music analysis. Contributing authors address canonical works by composers such as Berio Birtwistle Henze Kagel Ligeti Nono and Zimmermann but also expand the field to figures and artistic developments not regularly represented in existing music histories. Particular attention is given to new music theatre as a site of intense exchange – between practitioners of different art forms across national borders and with diverse mediating institutions. | New Music Theatre in Europe Transformations between 1955-1975

GBP 38.99
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Wine Terroir and Utopia Making New Worlds

Museums and Restitution New Practices New Approaches

Indian Cinema Beyond Bollywood The New Independent Cinema Revolution

Education and New Technologies Perils and Promises for Learners

Material Feminisms New Directions for Education

Material Feminisms New Directions for Education

Material Feminisms: New Directions for Education provides a range of powerful theoretical and innovative methodological examples to illuminate how new material feminism can be put to work in education to open up new avenues of research design and practice. It poses challenging questions about the nature of knowledge production the role of the researcher and the critical endeavour arising from inter- and post-disciplinarity. Working with diffractive methodologies and new materialist ecological epistemologies the book offers resources for hope which widen the scope for how educational problems are interrogated and provides a political counter-movement to neo-positivist outcomes-based approaches within education. Inspired by writers such as Barad Bennett and Deleuze and Guattari the book makes a radical break with cognitive dualist and universal conceptions of human subjectivity and intelligence in education. By taking its starting point as the co-consitutiveness of discourse materiality corporeality and place the book foregrounds educational practices as material enactments of multiple non-linear entangled affective and relational forces. It offers new insights into how gender class and ethnicity are constituted in and by material assemblages that are often submerged or ‘unseen’. This book is an essential starting place for those intrigued by what new theoretical accounts of materiality posthumanism and affect can offer educational research. Diffractive methodologies challenge readers to take a fuller range of actors into account than in ‘objective’ humanist methodologies and in so doing to pay closer attention to what data is. It invites researchers to engage with long-standing feminist concerns about power and knowledge production in research processes. This book was originally published as a special issue of Gender and Education. | Material Feminisms New Directions for Education

GBP 42.99
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