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Lister Ruth

    Understanding Theories and Concepts in Social Policy
    City of Ruins
    Poverty
    Der Buchladen am Ende der Welt
    • Der Buchladen am Ende der Welt

      Eine wahre Geschichte über ein abenteuerliches Leben und die Liebe zum Lesen

      AM ENDE DER WELT, GANZ WEIT IM SÜDEN NEUSEELANDS, steht ein winzig kleiner Buchladen. Er gehört einer Frau mit einer unfassbaren Lebensgeschichte: Ruth Shaw verlor ihr Kind und ihre große Liebe. Sie segelte jahrelang über den Pazifik, wurde von Piraten überfallen, wegen Glücksspiels verhaftet, war Streetworkerin und Köchin für einen Erzbischof. Heute verkauft sie Bücher im abgelegenen Fiordland. Oder verschenkt sie. In ihren Memoiren verwebt sie Anekdoten über die Menschen, die ihren Buchladen besuchen, mit den bittersüßen Geschichten aus ihrem abenteuerlichen Leben. Ein Buch über Trauer und Verlust, aber auch über die Liebe – zum Leben, zur Welt der Bücher und zur Weite des Ozeans. Eine Lebensgeschichte wie ein Abenteuerroman Ergreifend und zugleich voller Humor Ein kleiner Buchladen als Mikrokosmos des Lebens

      Der Buchladen am Ende der Welt
      4,3
    • Poverty

      • 256 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden

      Poverty remains one of the most urgent issues of our time. In this fully updated edition of her important intervention on the topic, Ruth Lister introduces students to the meaning and experience of poverty in the contemporary world. The book opens with a lucid discussion of current debates around the definition and measurement of poverty in industrialized societies, before embarking on a multifaceted exploration of its conceptualization. It draws on thinking in the field of international development and real-life accounts to emphasize aspects of poverty such as powerlessness, lack of voice, loss of dignity and respect. In so doing, the book embraces the relational, cultural, symbolic as well as material dimensions of poverty and makes important links between poverty and other concepts like capabilities, social divisions and exclusion, agency and citizenship. Lister concludes by making the case for reframing the politics of poverty as a claim for redistribution and recognition. The result is a rich and insightful analysis, which deepens and broadens our understanding of poverty today. Poverty will be essential reading for all students in the social sciences, as well as researchers, activists and policy-makers.

      Poverty
      4,0
    • City of Ruins

      • 308 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden

      **Re-published as City of Ruins in July 2021. Original title: Augury**The people of an ancient city awaken one night to find the earth beneath them trembling. At the Emperor’s Palace, though, the feasting goes on. Even as the omens multiply, the High Priest insists that the gods’ favour can be bought as it always has been — with gold and ritual sacrifice.Only the Augur — fearless, ageless, a prophetess who was once the power behind the throne — can see what is coming. Around her, an unlikely resistance gathers: Saba and Aemilia, her two young acolytes, stolen from distant homelands long ago; Myloxenes, the truth-seeking son of the High Priest, in flight from his savage father; and Antonus, pain-wracked and exiled, raising his family far from the depravity of the Palace he once called home.

      City of Ruins
      3,8
    • Demonstrating the relevance of theory to political and policy debates and practice, this dynamic and fully updated second edition helps students to grasp the real-life implications of social policy theory. It includes a new chapter featuring debates around disability, sexuality and the environment.

      Understanding Theories and Concepts in Social Policy