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      • Trusted Partner
        March 2012

        Abendschule

        Fibel für Erwachsene

        by Zsófia Bán, Terézia Mora, Péter Nádas

        Ihr Schreiben kommt aus dem Schweigen. Aus der Präsenz der unerzählten Geschichten, die das Kind von Überlebenden des Holocaust umgab. Zsófia Bán, die sich mit Essays über W. G. Sebald, Imre Kertész und Susan Sontag einen Namen gemacht hat, wählt die Form des Schulbuchs, um ihren enzyklopädischen Lebensstoff Fach für Fach, von Geographie und Chemie bis Französisch durchzuarbeiten. In einer subtil ironischen, von Terézia Móra hinreißend vertonten Sprache erzählt sie vom Verschwinden eines Naturforschers im Dschungel von Laos, von der Reise des jungen Flaubert mit seinem Freund Maxime nach Ägypten oder von einem mitteleuropäisches Frauenleben, das vor Gewehrläufen an der Donau endete. Sie schmuggelt aber auch eine der großartigsten lesbischen Liebeszenen in ihre »Abendschule« hinein, die je geschrieben wurden. Alle Texte eint die Lust, Tabuisiertes, auch Abwegiges zu erkunden, um fürs Leben zu lernen − ein eminent kluges, erzählsüchtiges Buch.

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        December 2014

        Ban Nuan Shi Guang

        by Tong Hua

        The novel tells the story of the heroine Yan Xiaochen from the campus to the city's life and emotional experience. About people's attitudes and choices in the face of pain and frustration.

      • Trusted Partner
        February 2020

        Local

        by Cai Cehai

        The work revolves around the author’s literary hometown, Sanchuan and a half decades of history. In the form of entries, the people, things, scenery, things, and emotions of Sanchuan and Ban are divided into small units, and they are divided into chapters, which are overlapped. It is also divided into narratives; both intertwined and alienated; like Zhang He's powerful, dense and thick large net, it depicts the author's love, pain, compassion, feelings and humanity for the "ideal homeland" wonderfully, one mountain and one river.

      • Trusted Partner
        Medicine
        June 2016

        Climate Change and Global Health

        by Colin Butler

        There is increasing understanding, globally, that climate change will have profound and mostly harmful effects on human health. This authoritative book brings together international experts to describe both direct (such as heat waves) and indirect (such as vector-borne disease incidence) impacts of climate change, set in a broad, international, economic, political and environmental context. This unique book also expands on these issues to address a third category of potential longer-term impacts on global health: famine, population dislocation, and conflict. This lively yet scholarly resource explores these issues fully, linking them to health in urban and rural settings in developed and developing countries. The book finishes with a practical discussion of action that health professionals can yet take. Now with added chapter updating key changes affecting climate change and health through 2015, culminating with UN secretary general Ban Ki Moon's hopeful comment "What was once unthinkable is now unstoppable". Climate change, now clearly worsening, is triggering a powerful social and technological response. Will this response be sufficient to avert its potentially catastrophic "tertiary" health effects? ; In this authoritative book, international experts examine long-recognised areas of health concern for populations vulnerable to climate change, describing effects that are both direct, such as heat waves, and indirect, such as via vector-borne diseases. ; a: Contributorsb: Acronymsc: Acknowledgementsd: Dedication - Colin D. Butlere: Foreword - Sir Andy HainesPart I: Introduction1: The Anthropocene: A Planet Under Pressure2: Climate Change and Global HealthPart II: Primary Effects3: Heat-related and Cold-related Mortality and Morbidity4: Occupational Heat Effects: A Global Health and Economic Threat Due to Climate Change5: Measuring and Estimating Occupational Heat Exposure and Effects in Relation to Climate Change: ‘Hothaps’ Tools for Impact Assessments and Prevention Approaches6: Climate Extremes, Disasters and HealthPart III: Secondary Effects7: Global Warming and Malaria in Tropical Highlands – An Estimation of Ethiopia’s ‘Unmitigated’ Annual Malaria Burden in the 21st Century8: Dengue: Distribution and Transmission Dynamics with Climate Change9: Lyme Disease and Climate Change10: Climate Change and Human Parasitic Disease11: Impacts of Climate Change on Allergens and Allergic Diseases: Knowledge and Highlights from Two Decades of Research12: Wildfires, Air Pollution, Climate Change and HealthPart IV: Tertiary Effects13: Famine, Hunger, Society and Climate Change14: Moving to a Better Life? Climate, Migration and Population Health15: Unholy Trinity: Climate Change, Conflict and Ill HealthPart V: Regional Issues16: Climate Change and Health in East Asia: A Food in Health Security Perspective17: Climate Change and Health in South Asian Countries18: Climate Change and Global Health: A Latin American Perspective19: S mall Island States – Canaries in the Coal Mine of Climate Change and Health20: Climate Change Adaptation to Infectious Diseases in Europe21: Climate Change and Health in the Arctic22: Climate Change and Health in Africa23: Zoonotic Diseases and Their Drivers in AfricaPart VI: Cross-Cutting Issues24: Climate Change, Food and Energy: Politics and Co-benefits25: Death of a Mwana: Biomass Fuels, Poverty, Gender and Climate Change26: Mental Health, Cognition and the Challenge of Climate Change27: Climate Change, Housing and Public Health28: Health in New Socio-economic Pathways for Climate Change ResearchPart VII: Transformation29: Health Activism and the Challenge of Climate Change30: Climate Change and Health: From Adaptation Towards a Solution32: Index31: From Paris towards 1.5 degrees C (Paperback Edition Only)

      • November 2021

        Ban Chiang, Northeast Thailand, Volume 2D

        Catalogs for Metals and Related Remains from Ban Chiang, Ban Tong, Ban Phak Top, and Don Klang

        by Edited by Joyce C. White and Elizabeth G. Hamilton

        Scholars of ancient metallurgy gain insights from individual artifacts as well as from synthetic overviews because debates can turn on details of particular objects from particular contexts. Therefore, it is important for archaeometallurgical studies to provide comprehensive catalogs that specify the attributes of individual objects as well as contexts and the technical studies undertaken on those objects. This fourth volume in the series is devoted to presenting the metallurgical evidence from Ban Chiang, Ban Tong, Ban Phak Top, and Don Klang in northeast Thailand in the form of detailed catalogs organized by sites, periods, and artifact types. All metal artifacts, metallic by-products, and crucibles from the four-site study are included. A catalog of analyzed prills is also included. The catalogs summarize all the contextual, metric, and analytical data from metallographic, elemental, and microhardness analyses. Illustrations and photomicrographs provide visual evidence for the study collection. These kinds of detailed catalogs form the raw material of technical and archaeological interpretation, enabling comparisons with other collections as well as allowing scholars to form their own conclusions independently of the interpretations of the authors.

      • Warfare & defence
        August 1997

        Research Required to Support Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Monitoring

        by Panel on Basic Research Requirements in Support of Comprehensive Test Ban Monitoring, National Research Council

        On September 24, 1996, President Clinton signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty at the United Nations Headquarters. Over the next five months, 141 nations, including the four other nuclear weapon states -- Russia, China, France, and the United Kingdom -- added their signatures to this total ban on nuclear explosions. To help achieve verification of compliance with its provisions, the treaty specifies an extensive International Monitoring System of seismic, hydroacoustic, infrasonic, and radionuclide sensors. This volume identifies specific research activities that will be needed if the United States is to effectively monitor compliance with the treaty provisions.

      • Weapons & equipment
        April 2012

        The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty

        Technical Issues for the United States

        by Committee on Reviewing and Updating Technical Issues Related to the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Policy and Global Affairs; National Research Council

        This report reviews and updates the 2002 National Research Council report, Technical Issues Related to the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). This report also assesses various topics, including: the plans to maintain the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear stockpile without nuclear-explosion testing; the U.S. capability to detect, locate, and identify nuclear explosions; commitments necessary to sustain the stockpile and the U.S. and international monitoring systems; and potential technical advances countries could achieve through evasive testing and unconstrained testing. Sustaining these technical capabilities will require action by the National Nuclear Security Administration, with the support of others, on a strong scientific and engineering base maintained through a continuing dynamic of experiments linked with analysis, a vigorous surveillance program, adequate ratio of performance margins to uncertainties. This report also emphasizes the use of modernized production facilities and a competent and capable workforce with a broad base of nuclear security expertise.

      • Weapons & equipment
        August 2002

        Technical Issues Related to the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty

        by Committee on Technical Issues Related to Ratification of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, Committee on International Security and Arms Control, National Academy of Sciences

        Drawing upon the considerable existing body of technical material related to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the National Academy of Sciences reviewed and assessed the key technical issues that arose during the Senate debate over treaty ratification. In particular, these include: (1) the capacity of the United States to maintain confidence in the safety and reliability of its nuclear stockpile in the absence of nuclear testing; (2) the nuclear-test detection capabilities of the international monitoring system (with and without augmentation by national systems and instrumentation in use for scientific purposes, and taking into account the possibilities for decoupling nuclear explosions from surrounding geologic media); and (3) the additions to their nuclear-weapons capabilities that other countries could achieve through nuclear testing at yield levels that might escape detection, and the effect of such additions on the security of the United States.

      • Natural disasters
        November 1995

        Seismological Research Requirements for a Comprehensive Test-Ban Monitoring System

        by Panel on Seismological Research Requirements for a Comprehensive Test-Ban Monitoring System, National Research Council

        Negotiators from more than 35 countries are attempting to formulate a nuclear test-ban treaty and delineate a system from monitoring compliance. This book covers: (1) the desirable characteristics and capabilities of seismic monitoring stations; (2) recommendations on the flow paths and handling of the data, which are to be unclassified; and (3) the types and extent of research that will be needed in the next decade. The primary focus of the book is to explore how basic seismological research and test ban monitoring can be mutually beneficial.

      • Children's & YA

        The Gang and King Bhumibol’s Royal Initiatives: Waste Treatment

        by Asian Manga Team

        Keng, Uan, Joe, Waen, and Nidnoi will learn about the late King Bhumibol’s royal initiatives in these fun and informative comics. Keng and his friends visit a conservation camp in Ban Laem, Phetchaburi. They will learn about the Laem Phak Bia Royal Project initiated by King Bhumibol. The project aims to treat wastewater and organic solid waste in a sustainable way.

      • Peace studies & conflict resolution
        August 2010

        Education and Conflict in Haiti

        Rebuilding the Education Sector after the 2010 Earthquake

        by Ketty Luzincourt, Jennifer Gulbrandson

        In Haiti, education both promotes and ameliorates conflict. This report describes the education sector before the 2010 earthquake, then presents recommendations on how Haiti and the international community can increase access to and the quality of Haitian schools and modernize the organization and function of the national education sector. Although these recommendations were initially developed before the earthquake occurred, the basic problems are unchanged, and the recommendations are relevant for “building back better,” in UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon’s words.

      • Children's & YA

        I'm a Maths Star! (Set 1)

        by Boaz

        The I'm a Maths Star! series comprises challenging Maths puzzles, presented in story form. Puzzles are described and then solved, step-by-step, through an engaging storyline, and using various Maths heuristic techniques that are also taught as part of the world-renowned Singapore Maths curriculum. Through illustrations and an engaging storyline, children will learn Maths heuristics, and be inspired to persevere in understanding, representing, and solving fun and intriguing Maths problems! Includes a Guide to Problem-solving by Yeap Ban Har!

      • Warfare & defence
        March 2000

        The Five Series Study

        Mortality of Military Participants in U.S. Nuclear Weapons Tests

        by Susan Thaul, William F. Page, Harriet Crawford, and Heather O'Maonaigh, Committee to Study the Mortality of Military Personnel Present at Atmospheric Tests of Nuclear Weapons

        More than 200,000 U.S. military personnel participated in atmospheric nuclear weapons tests between 1945 and the 1963 Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. Questions persist, such as whether that test participation is associated with the timing and causes of death among those individuals. This is the report of a mortality study of the approximately 70,000 soldiers, sailors, and airmen who participated in at least one of five selected U.S. nuclear weapons test series1 in the 1950s and nearly 65,000 comparable nonparticipants, the referents. The investigation described in this report, based on more than 5 million person-years of mortality follow-up, represents one of the largest cohort studies of military veterans ever conducted.

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