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Anthropology Islands and the Search for Meaning in the Anthropocene

Euro-Mediterranean Security: A Search for Partnership A Search for Partnership

Manual of Online Search Strategies Volumes I-III

Writing in-Between Collaborative Meaning Making in Performative Writing

Writing in-Between Collaborative Meaning Making in Performative Writing

Writing in-Between lies at intersections: between theory and praxis; between fiction and non-fiction; between author and reader; between the personal and the political. Beginning with a conceptual glossary that prepares readers for their journey through the book Dinesh offers two central texts to invite readers to become co-creators. The first F for _____ is written as an “academic novella” and culminates with an interactive section that is composed of guided invitations for the reader/co-creator. The second text Julys takes the form of a “dramatic memoir” and intersperses invitations for readers/co-creators between each of its chapters. Dinesh brings these threads together in an entirely interactive concluding chapter where her hopes for collaborative meaning making take centre stage. In all of its unique invitations to engage Dinesh’s readers/co-creators can either choose to craft their creations in personal notebooks or blank spaces in this work’s physical copy or to engage more publicly via virtual forums that can be accessed via QR codes and accompanying links that are scattered throughout the book. Guided by questions about writing can “do” — questions that have shaped Dinesh’s work as an artist scholar and educator for almost two decades — Writing in Between embodies one central tenet: that the significance of performative writing might be most powerfully experienced through a collaborative process of meaning making between a text’s author and its readers turned co-creators. | Writing in-Between Collaborative Meaning Making in Performative Writing

GBP 48.99
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Positive Psychoanalysis Meaning Aesthetics and Subjective Well-Being

Positive Psychoanalysis Meaning Aesthetics and Subjective Well-Being

Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy have in one way or another focused on the amelioration of the negative. This has only done half the job; the other half being to actively bring Positive Experience into patients’ lives. Positive Psychoanalysis moves away from this traditional focus on negative experience and problems and instead looks at what makes for a positive life experience bringing a new clinical piece to what psychoanalysts do: Positive Psychoanalysis and the interdisciplinary theory and research behind it. The envelope of functions entailed in Positive Psychoanalysis is an area of Being described as Subjective Well-Being. This book identifies three particular areas of function encompassed by SWB: Personal Meaning Aesthetics and Desire. Mark Leffert looks at the importance of these factors in our positive experiences in everyday life and how they are manifested in clinical psychoanalytic work. These domains of Being form the basis of chapters each comprising an interdisciplinary discussion integrating many strands of research and argument. Leffert discusses how the areas interact with each other and how they come to bear on the care healing and cure that are the usual subjects of psychoanalytic treatment. He also explores how they can be represented in contemporary psychoanalytic theory. This novel work discusses and integrates research findings phenomenology and psychoanalytic thought that have not yet been considered together. It seeks to inform readers about these subjects and demonstrates with clinical examples how to incorporate them into their clinical work with the negative helping patients not just to heal the negative but also move into essential positive aspects of living: a sense of personal meaning aesthetic competence and becoming a desiring being that experiences Subjective Well-Being. Drawing on ideas from across neuroscience philosophy and social and culture studies this book sets out a new agenda for covering the positive in psychoanalysis. Positive Psychoanalysis will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists neuroscientists and philosophers as well as academics across these fields and in psychiatry comparative literature and literature and the mind. | Positive Psychoanalysis Meaning Aesthetics and Subjective Well-Being

GBP 43.99
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Validation of Score Meaning for the Next Generation of Assessments The Use of Response Processes

Validation of Score Meaning for the Next Generation of Assessments The Use of Response Processes

Despite developments in research and practice on using examinee response process data in assessment design the use of such data in test validation is rare. Validation of Score Meaning in the Next Generation of Assessments Using Response Processes highlights the importance of validity evidence based on response processes and provides guidance to measurement researchers and practitioners in creating and using such evidence as a regular part of the assessment validation process. Response processes refer to approaches and behaviors of examinees when they interpret assessment situations and formulate and generate solutions as revealed through verbalizations eye movements response times or computer clicks. Such response process data can provide information about the extent to which items and tasks engage examinees in the intended ways. With contributions from the top researchers in the field of assessment this volume includes chapters that focus on methodological issues and on applications across multiple contexts of assessment interpretation and use. In Part I of this book contributors discuss the framing of validity as an evidence-based argument for the interpretation of the meaning of test scores the specifics of different methods of response process data collection and analysis and the use of response process data relative to issues of validation as highlighted in the joint standards on testing. In Part II chapter authors offer examples that illustrate the use of response process data in assessment validation. These cases are provided specifically to address issues related to the analysis and interpretation of performance on assessments of complex cognition assessments designed to inform classroom learning and instruction and assessments intended for students with varying cultural and linguistic backgrounds. The Open Access version of this book available at http://www. taylorfrancis. com has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4. 0 license. | Validation of Score Meaning for the Next Generation of Assessments The Use of Response Processes

GBP 46.99
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Ancient Egypt and Modern Psychotherapy Sacred Science and the Search for Soul

Phenomenology as Qualitative Research A Critical Analysis of Meaning Attribution

Phenomenology as Qualitative Research A Critical Analysis of Meaning Attribution

Phenomenology originated as a novel way of doing philosophy early in the twentieth century. In the writings of Husserl and Heidegger regarded as its founders it was a non-empirical kind of philosophical enquiry. Although this tradition has continued in a variety of forms ‘phenomenology’ is now also used to denote an empirical form of qualitative research (PQR) especially in health psychology and education. However the methods adopted by researchers in these disciplines have never been subject to detailed critical analysis; nor have the methods advocated by methodological writers who are regularly cited in the research literature. This book examines these methods closely offering a detailed analysis of worked-through examples in three influential textbooks by Giorgi van Manen and Smith Flowers and Larkin. Paley argues that the methods described in these texts are radically under-specified and suggests alternatives to PQR as an approach to qualitative research particularly the use of interview data in the construction of models designed to explain phenomena rather than merely describe or interpret them. This book also analyses and aims to develop the implicit theory of ‘meaning’ found in PQR writings. The author establishes an account of ‘meaning’ as an inference marker and explores the methodological implications of this view. This book evaluates the methods used in phenomenology-as-qualitative-research and formulates a more fully theorised alternative. It will appeal to researchers and students in the areas of health nursing psychology education public health sociology anthropology political science philosophy and logic. | Phenomenology as Qualitative Research A Critical Analysis of Meaning Attribution

GBP 46.99
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The Meaning of Movement Embodied Developmental Clinical and Cultural Perspectives of the Kestenberg Movement Profile

Ethics in Criminal Justice In Search of the Truth

Ethics in Criminal Justice In Search of the Truth

Introducing the fundamentals of ethical theory Ethics in Criminal Justice: In Search of the Truth Seventh Edition exposes the reader to the ways and means of making moral judgments by exploring the teachings of the great philosophers sources of criminal justice ethics and ethical issues in the criminal justice system. It is presented from two perspectives: a thematic perspective that addresses ethical principles common to all components of the discipline and an area-specific perspective that addresses the state of ethics in criminal justice in the fields of policing corrections and probation and parole. The seventh edition features discussion of current critical issues in criminal justice: accusations of racism police shootings stop and frisk policy marijuana laws mass incarceration life sentences prison privatization the swift and certain deterrence model of probation excessive probation fees and the Good Lives Model in corrections. The seventh edition also offers completely revised coverage of capital punishment and the rehabilitation debate and a discussion of how juvenile justice often fails to live up to its ideals. Finally the book features new case studies of recent ethical dilemmas in criminal justice to enhance students’ understanding of real-life ethics decision-making. Suitable for advanced undergraduates or graduate students in criminal justice programs in the US and globally this text offers a classical view of ethical decision-making and is well-grounded in specific case examples. | Ethics in Criminal Justice In Search of the Truth

GBP 56.99
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A Poetics of Jesus The Search for Christ Through Writing in the Nineteenth Century

Family Storytelling Negotiating Identities Teaching Lessons and Making Meaning

Patients Making Meaning Theorizing Sources of Information and Forms of Support in Women’s Health

Multimodality and Social Semiosis Communication Meaning-Making and Learning in the Work of Gunther Kress

The Meaning of Rehabilitation and its Impact on Parole There and Back Again in California

Agnes's Jacket A Psychologist's Search for the Meanings of Madness.Revised and Updated with a New Epilogue by the Author

Agnes's Jacket A Psychologist's Search for the Meanings of Madness.Revised and Updated with a New Epilogue by the Author

In a Victorian-era German asylum seamstress Agnes Richter painstakingly stitched a mysterious autobiographical text into every inch of the jacket she created from her institutional uniform. Despite every attempt to silence them hundreds of other psychiatric patients have managed to get their stories out or to publish them on their own. Today in a vibrant network of peer-advocacy groups all over the world those with firsthand experience of emotional distress are working together to unravel the mysteries of madness and to help one another recover. Agnes’s Jacket tells their story focusing especially on the Hearing Voices Network (HVN) an international collaboration of professionals people with lived experience and their families and friends who have been working to develop an alternative approach to coping with voices visions and other extreme states that is empowering and useful and does not start from the assumption that such people have a chronic illness. A vast gulf exists between the way medicine explains psychiatric conditions and the experiences of those who suffer. Hornstein’s work helps us to bridge that gulf guiding us through the inner lives of those diagnosed with schizophrenia bipolar illness depression and paranoia and emerging with nothing less than a new model for understanding one another and ourselves. | Agnes's Jacket A Psychologist's Search for the Meanings of Madness. Revised and Updated with a New Epilogue by the Author

GBP 48.99
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Apologies from Death Row The Meaning and Consequences of Offender Remorse

Apologies from Death Row The Meaning and Consequences of Offender Remorse

Apologies from Death Row explores the notion of remorse apologies and forgiveness within the context of capital punishment in the United States through the final words of offenders on death row and the covictims’ responses to them in their statements to the press after witnessing the execution. The book demonstrates that there is evidence that some offenders on death row are truly remorseful and that some of the family members of their victims could benefit from this remorse but that this is unlikely in the current system of capital punishment. Drawing from the fields of criminology psychology and sociology the book begins with a theoretically informed introduction to the concepts of remorse and forgiveness followed by an exploration of apology and forgiveness specifically in the context of capital punishment. It discusses how some initiatives within the criminal justice system such as apology laws and restorative justice programmes are being used to make it easier for offenders to apologize to their victims. Offenders on death row are considered addressing why they might or might not apologize and whether they are even capable of showing true remorse. The book then considers the family members of their victims (covictims) addressing whether they benefit from hearing the offender express remorse and witnessing the execution and whether forgiveness is possible in this context. Evidence to support the arguments presented in the book come from the offenders’ final words and the covictims’ responses to them in their statements to the press. The book dispels two common myths about the death penalty. First it shows that offenders on death row are not simply monsters who are incapable of understanding the severity of their crimes. Second it provides evidence that despite the popular belief that the death penalty is necessary in order to provide closure for the victims’ family members it may actually have the opposite effect. The family members’ statements to the press after witnessing the execution contain more negative themes like anger and disappointment than positive themes like closure and peace. The book concludes with a discussion of the implications this has for systems of justice in general and how a better understanding of the emotional state of offenders can help both victims and offenders. Apologies from Death Row will be of great interest to students and scholars of Criminology Psychology and Sociology. | Apologies from Death Row The Meaning and Consequences of Offender Remorse

GBP 48.99
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Psychoanalysis Society and the Inner World Embedded Meaning in Politics and Social Conflict

Psychoanalysis Society and the Inner World Embedded Meaning in Politics and Social Conflict

Psychoanalysis Society and the Inner World explores ideas from psychoanalysis that can be valuable in understanding social processes and institutions and in particular how psychoanalytic ideas and methods can help us understand the nature and roots of social and political conflict in the contemporary world. Among the ideas explored in this book of special importance are the ideas of a core self (Heinz Kohut and Donald Winnicott) and of an internal object world (Melanie Klein Ronald Fairbairn). David Levine shows how these ideas and others related to them offer a framework for understanding how social processes and institutions establish themselves as part of the individual’s inner world and how imperatives of the inner world influence the shape of those processes and institutions. In exploring the contribution psychoanalytic ideas can make to the study of society emphasis is placed on post-Freudian trends that emphasize the role of the internalization of relationships as an essential part of the process of shaping the inner world. The book’s main theme is that the roots of social conflict will be found in ambivalence about the value of the self. The individual is driven to ambivalence by factors that exist simultaneously as part of the inner world and the world outside. Social institutions may foster ambivalence about the self or they may not. Importantly this book distinguishes between institutions on the basis of whether they do or do not foster ambivalence about the self shedding light on the nature and sources of social conflict. Institutions that foster ambivalence also foster conflict at a societal level that mirrors and is mirrored by conflict over the standing of the self in the inner world. Levine makes extensive use of case material to illuminate and develop his core ideas. Psychoanalysis Society and the Inner World will appeal to psychoanalysts and to social scientists interested in psychoanalytic ideas and methods as well as students studying across these fields who are keen to explore social and political issues. | Psychoanalysis Society and the Inner World Embedded Meaning in Politics and Social Conflict

GBP 48.99
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Architecture of Resistance Cultivating Moments of Possibility within the Palestinian/Israeli Conflict

Diagramming the Big Idea Methods for Architectural Composition

Diagramming the Big Idea Methods for Architectural Composition

Becoming an architect is a daunting task. Beyond the acquisition of new skills and procedures beginning designers face an entirely unfamiliar mode of knowledge: design thinking. In Diagramming the Big Idea Jeffrey Balmer and Michael T. Swisher introduce the fundamentals of design thinking by illustrating how architects make and use diagrams to clarify their understanding of both specific architectural projects and universal principles of form and order. With accessible step-by-step procedures that interweave diagrams drawings and virtual models the authors demonstrate how to compose clear and revealing diagrams. Design thinking defines a method for engaging the world through observation and analysis. Beyond problem solving design is a search for possibilities. Mastering design thinking begins with learning the fundamentals of visual composition. It embraces the ability to synthesize deductive and imaginative reasoning combining both shrewd scrutiny and fevered speculation. Design diagrams make visible the abstractions that order the built environment. Premised upon the Beaux-Arts notion of the architectural parti Balmer and Swisher adopt the ‘Big Idea’ as a foil and as a suitcase to organize fundamentals of architectural composition. The goal of this book is to make explicit to students what they are learning why they are learning it and how to internalize such lessons toward their lifelong development as designers. | Diagramming the Big Idea Methods for Architectural Composition

GBP 44.99
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Soulmates Resurrecting Eve

Soulmates Resurrecting Eve

In Soulmates: Resurrecting Eve Juliana Geran Pilon argues for a return to an egalitarian view of men and women found in the original Genesis narrative as reflected through Judaism Christianity and Islam. In each of these Abrahamic traditions it was understood that man and woman were created to be soulmates in God's image equal despite their different functions within society. Pilon writes that this original message has gradually been distorted with disastrous effect. Any hope for an ennobling human community begins by resurrecting Eve as an equal partner to Adam. The work examines the Biblical creation narrative comparing it to Greek and other ancient mythologies. Pilon explains how the disturbing association of woman with sin and death led to Eve's demise as Adam's equal. The final section of the work deals with the Goddess myth love and marriage in early religious narratives and modern man's search for his soul no less than for a soulmate. The book at its core is a meditation on the relationship between men and women but also among human beings. The resurrection of Eve is indispensable to attaining a true appreciation of love and faith. Pilon uses religious texts expert commentary and various works of fiction poetry and psychology to make her argument come alive. The work is strengthened by the writing style alternately poetic and humorous and a clear and illuminating progression of ideas. Its emphasis on reconciliation and understanding and its post-feminist outlook will find a receptive audience. | Soulmates Resurrecting Eve

GBP 51.99
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A Guide for the Idealist Launching and Navigating Your Planning Career

Quantitative Research Methods in Communication The Power of Numbers for Social Justice

Quantitative Research Methods in Communication The Power of Numbers for Social Justice

This textbook is an advanced introduction to quantitative methods for students in communication and allied social science disciplines that focuses on why and how to conduct research that contributes to social justice. Today’s researchers are inspired by the potential for scholarship to make a difference for society to push toward more just and equitable ends and to engage in dialogue with members of the public so that they can make decisions about how to navigate the social cultural and political world equipped with accurate fair and up-to-date knowledge. This book illustrates the mechanics and the meaning behind quantitative research methods by illustrating each step in the research design process with research addressing questions of social justice. It provides practical guidance for researchers who wish to engage in the transformation of structures practices and understandings in society through community and civic engagement and policy formation. It contains step-by-step guidance in quantitative methods—from conceptualization through all the stages of execution of a study including providing a detailed guide for statistical analysis—and demonstrates how researchers can engage with social justice issues in systematic rigorous ethical and meaningful ways. This text serves as a core or supplementary textbook for graduate and advanced undergraduate courses in research methods for communication and social sciences and fills a gap for a methods text that is responsive to the desire of scholars to conduct socially impactful research. | Quantitative Research Methods in Communication The Power of Numbers for Social Justice

GBP 44.99
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Everyday Social Justice and Citizenship Perspectives for the 21st Century

Everyday Social Justice and Citizenship Perspectives for the 21st Century

Social justice is a concept which is widely touted and lauded as desirable yet its meaning may differ depending on whether its focus is on the underlying values of social justice the more specific objectives these entail or the actual practices or policies which aim to achieve social justice. In the current global political context we need to re-examine what we mean by social justice and demonstrate that making a difference and contributing to human flourishing is more achievable than this context would suggest. The book aims to increase our sense of being able to enact social justice by showcasing different ways of contributing to social justice and making a difference in different settings and different ways. Part 1 introduces a fluid and contextual approach to social justice. Part 2 examines social justice and faith perspectives such as Christianity Judaism Islam and community organisations. Part 3 illustrates perspectives on children the family sport and local government. Part IV provides perspectives of social justice in education. Considering concepts of citizenship and social justice from a variety of contemporary perspectives Everyday Social Justice and Citizenship should be considered essential reading for academics and students from a range of social scientific disciplines with an interest in social justice as well as those working in education community work youth work and chaplaincy. | Everyday Social Justice and Citizenship Perspectives for the 21st Century

GBP 46.99
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Project Planning and Control