01083nam0 2200313 450 00003656220140610094548.020140609d1968----km-y0itaa50------baitaITBoris L. Pasternakdi Cesare G. De MichelisFirenze<<La>> Nuova Italia1968143 p.17 cm<<Il>> castoro23Tit. sulla cop. e sul dorso: Pasternak2001<<Il>> castoro23PasternakPasternak,Boris Leonidovic891.74(22. ed.)Letteratura russa. 1917-1991De Michelis,Cesare Giuseppe446867ITUniversità della Basilicata - B.I.A.REICATunimarc000036562Boris L. Pasternak102703UNIBASLETTERESTD0990120140609BAS011018STD0990120140610BAS010945BAS01BAS01BOOKBASA1Polo Storico-UmanisticoDSLFCollezione DiSLFDF/E20797F7972014060904Prestabile Didattica02308nam 2200577Ia 450 991045793680332120200520144314.01-283-35986-3978661335986590-272-8122-X(CKB)2550000000073651(EBL)802019(OCoLC)658217151(SSID)ssj0000642632(PQKBManifestationID)11404187(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000642632(PQKBWorkID)10651775(PQKB)10059854(MiAaPQ)EBC802019(Au-PeEL)EBL802019(CaPaEBR)ebr10515904(EXLCZ)99255000000007365119800609d1979 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrVoice quality[electronic resource] a classified research bibliography /John LaverAmsterdam J. Benjamins19791 online resource (233 p.)Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series V, Library and information sources in linguistics ;v. 5Includes index.90-272-0996-0 VOICE QUALITY A CLASSIFIED RESEARCH BIBLIOGRAPHY; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; PREFACE; Table of contents; Main List; CLASSIFICATION KEY; TOPIC INDEX; 1. General Surveys and Glossaries; 2 Early Writings on Voice Quality and Historical Commentaries; 3.The Description of Voice Quality; 4. The Perception of Voice Quality; 5. Speaker-Characterizing Functions of Voice Quality; 6. Experimental Phonetic Techniques and Voice Quality; 7. Miscellaneous Aspects of Voice Quality; 8 Proceedings of International CongressesAmsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science.Series V,Library and information sources in linguistics ;v. 5.VoiceBibliographyElocutionBibliographyElectronic books.VoiceElocution016.612/78016.61278Laver John183262MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910457936803321Voice quality2095090UNINA04097nam 2200493 450 991014955620332120230519104612.01-60728-117-1(CKB)3710000000933860(Safari)9781607281177(OCoLC)963965856(WaSeSS)IndRDA00115552(MiAaPQ)EBC7171278(Au-PeEL)EBL7171278(CaSebORM)9781607281177(EXLCZ)99371000000093386020230519d2017 uy 0engurunu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierBecoming a can-do leader a guide for the busy manager /Frank Satterthwaite , and Jamie Millard1st editionAlexandria, Virginia :Association for Talent Development,[2017]©20171 online resource (1 volume) illustrations1-56286-992-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Too Busy to Read This Book? -- 1. To Make the Can-Do Mind Shift: Be a Myth Buster -- 2. To Get the Right Stuff Done: Think TPL -- 3. To Unleash the Can-Do Spirit: Check Their VITALS -- 4. To Enhance Your Leadership: Engage in Situational Doing -- 5. To Build a Can-Do Team: Use Delegation That emPOWERS -- 6. To Keep Improving: Create a Can-Do Learning Culture -- 7. To Be a Star With Career Security: Be a Can-Do Champion -- The Can-Do Leader's Lexicon -- Appendix I: Can-Do Leader TPL Leadership Style Profiler -- Appendix II: Can-Do Spirit VITALS Checkup -- References -- About the Authors -- Index.Manage without giving up the work you love and discover the leader within. Conventional management thinking says that to manage effectively you must delegate. It implies that managers fall into a dangerous trap when they continue to perform tasks they love from a previous role. And it says that to not “let go” is to give in to a controlling tendency that robs staff of development opportunities. But not everyone agrees. Today’s increasingly knowledge-driven, cost-competitive work world is changing the way management gets done. More and more, people in management roles are becoming can-do leaders who must continue to practice their specialty while managing and developing the skills of others. But this group has had few guidelines to follow—until now. In Becoming a Can-Do Leader, executive coaches Frank Satterthwaite and Jamie Millard say it’s time that management thinking catches up with reality. Their extensive experience training and coaching player-managers at all levels has shown that successful managers both delegate and do. Whether you’re trying to survive your first promotion or coaching executives who yearn to keep up with their field, essential guidelines for can-do leadership are inside this book. You’ll find workplace examples that ring true, as well as unique strategies and tools that both help you identify your values and provide insight into your natural leadership style. Don’t let your knowledge and skills decline by stepping completely out of the professional picture. It’s time to get productively and selectively involved in the work, enabling you to manage more effectively and keep up with important advances in your field—all while developing and leading your team to success. Discover how to work strategically with staff while continuing to grow expertise in your profession. That’s can-do leadership.Organizational effectivenessTeams in the workplaceManagementOrganizational effectiveness.Teams in the workplaceManagement.658.302Satterthwaite Frank1246135MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910149556203321Becoming a can-do leader2889603UNINA01051nam0 22002651i 450 UON0005710020231205102251.12120020107d1980 |0itac50 baindID|||| 1||||1100 peribahasa Indonesia & 222 Peribahasa InggerisL. Dt. Bagindo Nagari, Z. St. NagariTanggalYudhistira1980112 p.20 cmTanggalUONL001671INDS XIVINDONESIA - ANTROPOLOGIA, ETNOL., FOLKLORE, SPORTABAGINDO NAGARIL. Dt.UONV036409653735NAGARIZ. St.UONV036410653736YudhistiraUONV255087650ITSOL20240220RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00057100SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI INDS XIV 047 SI SA 66332 5 047 1100 peribahasa Indonesia & 222 Peribahasa Inggeris1149498UNIOR08270nam 2200649 450 991054054030332120230809233540.01-118-92397-91-78785-645-31-118-92398-7(CKB)4330000000007504(Au-PeEL)EBL4756293(CaPaEBR)ebr11309811(CaONFJC)MIL974562(MiAaPQ)EBC4756293(OCoLC)965774127(EXLCZ)99433000000000750420161216h20172017 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierThe handbook of the criminology of terrorism /edited by Gary LaFree, Joshua D. FreilichChichester, West Sussex, England :Wiley-Blackwell,2017.©20171 online resource (630 pages) illustrationsWiley Handbooks in Criminology and Criminal Justice1-118-92396-0 1-118-92395-2 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Machine generated contents note: Notes on Contributors I. INTRODUCTION Bringing Criminology into the Study of Terrorism Gary LaFree and Joshua David Freilich II. ETIOLOGY 1. The Etiology of Radicalization toward Terrorism Randy Borum 2. Psychological Factors in Radicalization: A "3N" Approach Arie W. Kruglanski and David Webber 3. What Makes Them Do It?: Individual-Level Predictors of Terrorism John P.Sawyer and Justin Hienz 4. The Terrorists' Planning Cycle: Patterns of Pre-Incident Behavior Brent Smith, Paxton Roberts and Kelly Damphousse 5. Group-Level Predictors of Political and Religiously Motivated Violence Katharine Boyd 6. Country Level Predictors of Terrorism Nancy Morris and Gary LaFree III. THEORIES 7. General Strain Theory and Terrorism Robert Agnew 8. Social Learning, Terrorism, and Terrorists: Exploring the Boundaries of a General Theory Keith Akins and L. Thomas Winfree, Jr. 9. The Situational Approach to Terrorism Henda Hsu and Graeme Newman 10. Victimization Theories and Terrorism William S. Parkin 11. Analyzing Radicalization and Terrorism: A Situational Action Theory Per-Olof H. Wikstrom and Noemie Bouhana IV. RESEARCH METHODS 12. Measuring Terrorism Laura Dugan and Michael Distler 13. Paradigmatic Case Studies and Prison Ethnography in Terrorism Research Mark S. Hamm and Ramon Spaaij 14. Social Network Analysis and Terrorism Aili Malm, Rebecca Nash and Ramin Moghadam 15. Spatial and Temporal Analysis of Terrorism and Insurgency Shane D. Johnson and Alex Braithwaite 16. The Promise of Multilevel Analysis in the Study of Terrorism Brian Johnson 17. Methodological Advancements in the Study of Terrorism: Using Latent Class Growth Analysis Nancy Morris 18. Time Series Analysis in the Study of Terrorism Henda Y. Hsu and Robert Apel V. TYPES OF TERRORISM 19. Far Right Terrorism in the United States Pete Simi and Bryan Bubolz 20. Left-Wing Terrorism: From Anarchists to the Radical Environmental Movement and Back Jennifer Varriale Carson 21. Assessing Aerial Hijacking as a Terrorist Tactic Susan Fahey 22. Evolution of Suicide Attacks Ami Pedahzur and Susanne Martin 23. Terrorist Assassinations: A Criminological Perspective Marissa Mandala VI. TERRORISM AND OTHER TYPES OF CRIME 24. Organized Crime and Terrorism Enrique Desmond Arias and Nazia Hussain 25. Similar from a Distance: A Comparison of Terrorism and Hate Crime Ryan D. King, Laura M. DeMarco and Robert J. Vanden Berg 26. Studying Extremist Homicide in the United States Jeff Gruenewald and Brent Klein 27. Financing Terror: Financial Schemes Involving Far-Right and Jihadi Extremists Brandon A. Sullivan, Joshua David Freilich and Steven Chermak 28. An Empirical Analysis of Maritme Piracy using the Global Terrorism Database Bo Jiang VII. COUNTERING TERRORISM 29. Empowering Communities to Prevent Violent Extremism: A Report on the Ape August 2014 National Summit William Braniff and Steven Weine 30. Terrorist Plots Against the US: What We Have Really Faced, and How We Might Best Defend Against It Kevin Strom, Mark Pope and John S. Hollywood 31. The Ten Commandments for Effective Counterterrorism Simon Perry, David Weisburd and Badi Hasisi 32. Prosecuting Terrorism Post-9/11: Impact of Policy Changes on Case Outcomes Christopher Shields, Brent Smith and Kelly Damphousse 33. Prisons: Their Role in Creating and Containing Terrorists Margaret A. Zahn 34. The Individual Risk Assessment of Terrorism: Recent Developments John Monahan 35. Legislative Efforts to Intervene and Prevent Eco-Terrorist Attacks Sue-Ming Yang and Yi-Yuan Su 36. On the Relevance of Cyber Criminological Research in the Design of Policies and Sophisticated Security Solutions against Cyber-Terrorism Events David Maimon and Alexander Testa Index."The Handbook of the Criminology of Terrorism features a collection of essays that represent the most recent criminological research relating to the origins and evolution of, along with responses to, terrorism, from a criminological perspective. Offers an authoritative overview of the latest criminological research into the causes of and responses to terrorism in today&rsquo;s world Covers broad themes that include terrorism&rsquo;s origins, theories, methodologies, types, relationship to other forms of crime, terrorism and the criminal justice system, ways to counter terrorism, and more Features original contributions from a group of international experts in the field Provides unique insights into the field through an exclusive focus on criminological conceptual frameworks and empirical studies that engage terrorism and responses to it"--Provided by publisher."Although there has been an explosive growth in research on terrorism across the social and behavioral sciences in the past two decades, until recently much of this work originated in political science or psychology. Some may find this surprising because terrorism clearly falls within the domain of criminology that has been defined (Sutherland and Cressey 1978:3) as encompassing research on "...the breaking of laws and reactions to the breaking of laws." As Clarke and Newman (2006:i) succinctly put it, "Terrorism is a form of crime in all essential respects." When we set out to compile this Handbook our main goal was to make it the source that researchers and policy experts would turn to for expert knowledge on criminological theories, methods and research on understanding the human causes and consequences of terrorism. We have aimed to make the Handbook relevant not just for scholars, but also for students, policy makers and practitioners. The Handbook should be especially useful for the growing number of classes on terrorism and homeland security that have appeared over the past 20 years. The Handbook includes six substantive sections and 36 chapters from leading researchers on the major themes and controversies in each of these sections. Individual chapters present specific topics or themes and define and describe key concepts within each section. Each chapter also outlines the current state of research by reviewing the major conceptual frameworks and empirical findings in each area. Throughout the Handbook our contributors have endeavored to highlight areas of widespread agreement within the field, as well as important debates and controversies"--Provided by publisher.Wiley handbooks in criminology and criminal justice.CriminologyTerrorismResearchTerrorismPreventionCriminologiathubTerrorismethubLlibres electrònicsthubCriminology.TerrorismResearch.TerrorismPrevention.CriminologiaTerrorisme364.1317SOC004000bisacshLaFree Gary878242Freilich Joshua D.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910540540303321The handbook of the criminology of terrorism2632196UNINA