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Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- Introduction: An office of class and classification -- Chapter 1: Keepers of the Office: Accommodation and domestic staff, 1782-1868 -- Residents -- Pets, pests and other miscreants -- Riot and debauchery -- Chapter 2: Keepers of the papers: The Librarian's Department, 1801-68 -- Arranging, methodizing and digesting -- Quite de Jack in office -- Much irregularity -- The hardest working man in Europe -- Unhappy spirit -- Misnomer's heir -- Chapter 3: Carriers of the papers: The King's/Queen's Messengers, 1795-1858 -- Persons of a very subordinate class -- A change in the class of persons -- New ways for old -- Matters of fancy and caprice -- The end of superintendence -- Chapter 4: Adjusting to the new: Accommodation and domestic staff, 1868-1914 -- Servants of the new -- Theft, negligence and security -- Divisions of labour -- Pestilence, redolence and sustenance -- Chapter 5: Managing the past: The Librarian's Department, 1868-1914 -- Salaries, supplementals and salvation -- Archives, arrears and registers -- Publishing the record -- After the Hertslets -- Custody, research (and arrears) -- Chapter 6: Delivering the message: The foreign service messengers, 1858-1914 -- Rewarding gentlemen -- Here today but gone tomorrow -- Testing their worth -- Going local, paying less -- Conclusion: An office of distinction and domesticity -- Bibliography -- Manuscript collections -- Printed documentary and reference works -- Monographs, memoirs and essay collections -- Articles and contributions -- Dissertations -- Newsprint -- Index.
In: Xtreme armed forces
In: Palgrave studies in green criminology
In: Sociology of children and families series
This outstanding work examines black mothers' engagements with attachment parenting and shows how it both undermines and reflects neoliberalism. Unique in its intersectional analysis, it fills a gap in the literature, drawing on black feminist theorizing to examine intensive mothering practices and policies.
In: Law Enforcement Ser.
In: Palgrave Studies in Green Criminology
1.Victims of Environmental Harm -- 2.Prosecution of Environmental Offending -- 3.Justice as Procedure and Justice as Outcome -- 4.Restorative Justice -- 5.Restorative Justice in an Environmental Offending Context: Theory and Practice -- 6.Restorative Justice Conferencing in an Environmental Offending Context: Case Studies -- 7.The Benefits and Limitations of Restorative Justice Conferencing -- 8.Overcoming the Barriers to Restorative Justice Conferencing -- 9.Environmental Victims and Restorative Justice Conferencing -- 10.Justice as Meaningful Involvement and its Operationalisation through Restorative Justice Conferencing.
Zusammenfassung: "On April 16th, 1945 the Red Army launched their fourth largest offensive along the Eastern Front during World War II. The objective was to seize Berlin before the Western Allies. Sixteen days later, the former capital of the Third Reich fell to the conquering armies of Generals Georgi Zhukov and his rival Ivan Koniev. The cost to capture the largest urban complex on mainland Europe from a handful of understrength Heer and Waffen-SS divisions, supported by Volkssturm and Hitlerjugend formations armed mainly with Panzerfaust anti-armour rockets, was exceptionally high. The Red Army suffered more casualties among its soldiers than during the six month siege of Stalingrad, and it lost more armoured vehicles than during the Battle of Kursk. Total losses among the defenders and civilian population remain unknown. Central Berlin was left a wasteland. The scars of the street fighting are still visible today, seventy-five years after the battle."
Machine generated contents note:ch. 1The U-boat War in 1939-1944 --pt. ITechnical Innovations --ch. 2The Snorkel --pt. ATechnical Characteristics of the Snorkel --pt. BInception to Implementation March 1943-June 1944 --ch. 3Snorkel Protective Coating --ch. 4Acoustic Camouflage --ch. 5Electro/Hydrogen Peroxide-Powered U-boats (Type XXI, Type XXIII, Type XXVIW) --pt. IIEvolution of Operations and Tactics --ch. 6Operations, Experience Reports and Evolving Tactical Procedures, June 1944-April 1945 --ch. 7Crew Health --ch. 8Allied Countermeasures --ch. 9The American Coast, May 1944-May 1945 --pt. IIIA Case Study in U-Boat History and Maritime Archaeology --ch. 10U-869: Catastrophic Snorkel Failure.
In: The Morehouse College King collection series on civil & human rights
"This book introduces new audiences to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s final initiative, the multiracial Poor People's Campaign (PPC) of 1968. Robert Hamilton depicts the experience of poor people who traveled to Washington in May 1968 to dramatize the issue of poverty by building a temporary city, Resurrection City. His narrative allows us to hear their voices and understand the strategies, objectives, and organization of the campaign. In addition, he highlights the campaign's educational aspect, showing that significant social movements are a means by which societies learn about themselves and framing the PPC as an initiative whose example can teach and inspire current and future generations. The study thus situates Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy and teachings in relation to current events and further solidifies Dr. King's cultural and sociopolitical relevance. In the decades since 1968, we have seen increasing global inequality leading to greater social polarization, including in the United States. Hamilton offers the insight that the radical politics of Dr. King--as represented in the civil rights and human rights agendas of the PPC--can help us understand and address the challenges of this polarization. Hamilton highlights Dr. King's commitment to ending poverty and explains why Dr. King's ideas on this and related issues should be brought to the attention of a wider public who often view him almost exclusively as a civil rights, but not a human rights, leader"--