Consuming Innocence

Consuming Innocence
Title Consuming Innocence PDF eBook
Author Karen Brooks
Publisher Univ. of Queensland Press
Total Pages 340
Release 2008
Genre Family & Relationships
ISBN 9780702236457

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"This is an academic look at the contribution of popular culture to the loss if innocence in today's children."--Publisher.

So Sexy So Soon

So Sexy So Soon
Title So Sexy So Soon PDF eBook
Author Diane E. Levin, Ph.D.
Publisher Ballantine Books
Total Pages 242
Release 2009-07-21
Genre Family & Relationships
ISBN 0345505077

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Risqué Halloween costumes for young girls. T-shirts that boast “Chick Magnet” for toddler boys. Sexy content on almost every television channel, as well as in movies and video games. Popular culture and technology inundate our boys and girls with an onslaught of graphic sexual messages at earlier ages than ever before. Without the emotional sophistication to understand what they are doing and seeing, kids are getting into increasing trouble emotionally and socially. Parents are left shaking their heads, wondering: How did this happen? What can we do? Diane E. Levin, Ph.D., and Jean Kilbourne, Ed.D., internationally recognized experts in, respectively, early childhood development and the impact of the media on children and teens, offer parents essential, age-appropriate strategies to counter the assault. Filled with savvy suggestions, helpful sample dialogues, and poignant stories from families dealing with these issues, So Sexy So Soon provides parents with the information, skills, and confidence they need to discuss sensitive topics openly and effectively–so their kids can just be kids.

How We Are Governed

How We Are Governed
Title How We Are Governed PDF eBook
Author Philip Dearman
Publisher Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages 245
Release 2014-06-26
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 1443862398

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How We Are Governed explores interdisciplinary relations between communication and politics. It brings together diverse perspectives from the field of Communication and Media Studies, focusing on formal arenas of politics and public policy as well as politics in the broad sense of an informal negotiation of social relations of power between people. The book deals with questions about governing across many different domains, paying particular attention to communicative practices and technologies. Each chapter focuses on some empirical instance or instances of media–politics and media–democracy relations, on how these have been or are being exercised in shaping the limits of possible action, and on how they are being interrogated and reinvented. A persistent theme is whether the arrangements detailed in each instance can best be described as democratic, or otherwise. Chapters focus on arguments about media regulation; the guardianship of public life; the Leveson Inquiry; Web 2.0 communication in German elections; new media and citizen participation in politics; reality TV and the formation of economic literacy; online participation in the “illiberal democracy” of Singapore; citizenship and market formation in online safety education programs; mining taxes and market populism; and public broadcasting and soft diplomacy.

The Plea of Innocence

The Plea of Innocence
Title The Plea of Innocence PDF eBook
Author Tim Bakken
Publisher NYU Press
Total Pages 248
Release 2022-10-04
Genre Law
ISBN 1479817120

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"Providing the first fundamental reform of its kind for the adversarial legal system, The Plea of Innocence introduces a new method through which to free innocent people from prison, a search for truth through the discovery of exonerating facts"--

Ideas to Postpone the End of the World

Ideas to Postpone the End of the World
Title Ideas to Postpone the End of the World PDF eBook
Author Ailton Krenak
Publisher House of Anansi
Total Pages 88
Release 2020-10-06
Genre Social Science
ISBN 148700852X

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“Ailton Krenak’s ideas inspire, washing over you with every truth-telling sentence. Read this book.” — Tanya Talaga, bestselling author of Seven Fallen Feathers Indigenous peoples have faced the end of the world before. Now, humankind is on a collective march towards the abyss. Global pandemics, extreme weather, and massive wildfires define this era many now call the Anthropocene. From Brazil comes Ailton Krenak, renowned Indigenous activist and leader, who demonstrates that our current environmental crisis is rooted in society’s flawed concept of “humanity” — that human beings are superior to other forms of nature and are justified in exploiting it as we please. To stop environmental disaster, Krenak argues that we must reject the homogenizing effect of this perspective and embrace a new form of “dreaming” that allows us to regain our place within nature. In Ideas to Postpone the End of the World, he shows us the way.

Family Tourism

Family Tourism
Title Family Tourism PDF eBook
Author Heike A. Schänzel
Publisher Channel View Publications
Total Pages 271
Release 2012-07-20
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1845413296

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The family remains at the emotional heart of society, and makes up a significant proportion of the tourism market. However, the concept of family has changed over the decades and there are now different types of families that have their own unique attributes and needs. Families may have one parent or two, who may or may not be of different genders. This cutting-edge book constructs a multidisciplinary perspective on family tourism by discussing various types of families; how parents and children influence travel behaviours now and in the future and how family holidays may also be linked to stress. Family Tourism: Multidisciplinary Perspectives provides a compilation of issues from academic writers around the globe, to provide a range of perspectives linked by a common theme of family tourism with a futures perspective.

Life Narratives and Youth Culture

Life Narratives and Youth Culture
Title Life Narratives and Youth Culture PDF eBook
Author Kate Douglas
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 267
Release 2016-12-26
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1137551178

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This book considers the largely under-recognised contribution that young writers have made to life writing genres such as memoir, letter writing and diaries, as well as their innovative use of independent and social media. The authors argue that these contributions have been historically silenced, subsumed within other literary genres, culturally marginalised or co-opted for political ends. Furthermore, the book considers how life narrative is an important means for youth agency and cultural participation. By engaging in private and public modes of self-representation, young people have contested public discourses around the representation of youth, including media, health and welfare, and legal discourses, and found means for re-engaging and re-appropriating self-images and representations. Locating their research within broader theoretical debates from childhood and youth studies: youth creative practice and associated cultural implications; youth citizenship and autonomy; the rights of the child; generations and power relationships, Poletti and Douglas also position their inquiry within life narrative scholarship and wider discussions of self-representation from the margins, representations of conflict and trauma, and theories of ethical scholarship.