Dialectic, rhetoric and contrast: the infinite middle of meaning
In: Vernon Press series in philosophy
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In: Vernon Press series in philosophy
More than ever, organisations are facing a data avalanche from various sources, be they in electronic or hard copy format. How an organisation manages this ever-increasingly important resource - data - can benefit or hinder its ability to achieve its objectives. Creating and Managing a CRM Platform for Your Organisation not only covers how the principles of data management, including data quality and data security, can be applied to an organisation's customer relationship management (CRM) platform, but also highlights how aspects of data management, marketing and technology are needed to operate, develop and manage a CRM platform in order to carry out tasks such as reporting and analysis, developing data plans, undertaking data audits, data migrations and campaign mailings which will result in an organisation using data effectively in order to achieve its goals and objectives. The issues and topics covered apply to all organisations that use a CRM platform and the data it contains as part of their business activities, regardless of the industry sector or size of the organisation.
Aboriginal Children, History and Health - Front Cover -- Aboriginal Children, History and Health -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Plates -- List of Illustrations -- Figures -- Tables -- Notes on Contributors -- Foreword by Colin Tatz -- Preface -- Notes -- Reference -- Acknowledgements -- Special note -- Note -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- What the book is about -- Dancing with strangers -- The Aboriginal child in history -- The sequence of chapters in the book -- Notes -- References -- PART I: The child in the human story
In: New York Academy of Sciences Series
Cover -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- About this book -- About the companion website -- PART I: Processes in Aquatic Ecosystems -- CHAPTER 1: Australian waters: diverse, variable and valuable -- 1.1 The Challenge for Aquatic Ecologists -- 1.2 Defining Some Common Terms -- 1.3 Australian Inland Waters: Their Diversity and Distribution -- 1.4 The Water Regime: 'Where, When and to What Extent Water is Present' -- 1.4.1 Water budgets, scale issues and human influences on water regimes -- 1.4.2 Components of the water regime -- 1.4.3 Water regime variability -- 1.5 Linkages in Aquatic Ecosystems: from Molecular Bonds to Global Exchanges -- 1.5.1 Wonderful water and its molecular linkages -- 1.5.2 Linkages at the catchment scale -- 1.5.3 Linkages at the global scale: the hydrological cycle -- 1.5.4 Continental linkages and surface waters in Australia -- 1.5.5 Continental linkages and groundwaters in Australia -- 1.6 The Structure of This Book -- CHAPTER 2: Physical processes in standing waters -- 2.1 Depth and Physical Processes -- 2.2 Let There Be Light ... -- 2.2.1 Light reaching the water surface -- 2.2.2 Light below the water surface -- 2.2.3 Seeing through water: Secchi discs and quantum sensors -- 2.3 The Euphotic Zone -- 2.4 Light and Life -- 2.5 Temperature and Stratification -- 2.5.1 Causes of stratification -- 2.6 Using Circulation Patterns to Classify Standing Waters -- 2.7 Ecological Implications of the Different Types of Stratification and Mixing -- 2.8 Deep Versus Shallow Standing Waters: Depth Matters -- 2.8.1 How deep standing waters form -- 2.8.2 How shallow standing waters form -- 2.9 Synthesis -- CHAPTER 3: Chemical processes in standing waters -- 3.1 'There's a Certain Chemistry ...' -- 3.2 Dissolved Gases -- 3.2.1 Oxygen -- 3.2.2 Carbon dioxide -- 3.2.3 Hydrogen -- 3.2.4 Methane -- 3.3 Sources of Ions.
The original 1944 G.I. Bill holds a special place in the American imagination. In popular mythology, it stands as the capstone of the Greatest Generation narrative of World War II, a fitting reward for the nation's heroes. Given the almost universal acclaim afforded the bill, future generations of warriors might well have expected to receive similar remuneration for their sacrifice. But when soldiers of the Vietnam conflict shed their fatigues and returned home to civilian life, they found that their G.I. Bills fell well short of what many of them believed they had earned. In this first legisl
In: Social aspects of AIDS
In: A Black Country Society Publication
In: Cambridge studies in population, economy, and society in past time 5
This book is a pioneering social and economic study of a London suburban parish in the seventeenth century, which sheds new light on the important but relatively neglected topic of London's social history. Chapters on demography, social and occupational structure, topography, population turnover and residential mobility, and neighbourly relations, lead to a discussion of the involvement of the inhabitants of the district in local government and church ceremonial. Throughout, social and economic features of the neighbourhood are compared to those found elsewhere in London, and in other towns and cities, in early modern England. The book will therefore be of interest to all concerned with the behaviour of the town dweller in the past, and will serve as a springboard for further historical studies of urban society