13 Reasons Why meets John Green and Jennifer Niven in We Are Not Ok - a powerful novel about what happens when girls are silenced. If only they could have spoken out.
This is a fact: Ryan Summers walked into Three Rivers College and killed thirteen women, then himself. But no one can say why. The question is one that cries out to be answered - by Ryan's mother, Moira, by Ishbel, the mother of Abigail, the first victim, and by DI Helen Birch, put in charge of the case on her first day at her new job. But as the tabloids and the media swarm, as the families' secrets come out, as the world searches for someone...
The collection investigates the role of international criminal law at different stages of mass atrocities, shifting away from its narrow understanding solely as an instrument of punishment of those most responsible. The book is premised on the idea that there are distinct phases of collective violence, and international criminal law contributes in one way or another to each phase. The authors therefore explore various possibilities for interna...
Summer in Smallbridge brings nothing exciting and just more gossip. And then Magenta Sharp opens a pop-up magic shop next to Elsie Pickles' emporium, and soon the magic-hating town of Smallbridge is overrun.
The hilarious rhyming picture book from the popular series is available now in board book form. A cat becomes dissatisfied with sitting on gnats, defying the rhyming rules with Frog and Dog's help.
Originally published in 2005. In this enlightening collection, Marcus Powell uses empirical evidence to document how different nations formulate their training strategy, including how labour market information is used to inform decision making and the role stakeholders play in the process.
Originally published in 2004. The study challenges some long-accepted conclusions about democratization and the devolution of power, advancing into new international arenas Riker and Dahl's relatively-ignored theoretical concerns that decentralized federations are ineffective and disintegrative while centralized federations are consolidating.
First published in 2004. Focusing on the city of Birmingham, and drawing on both local and national sources, Self Help and Civic Culture explores the changing nature of self improvement and citizenship in Victorian Britain.
The huge variety of what can be put in a burrito is explored in this eighty-recipe Mexican street food guide, also exploring delicious and exciting sides and churros.
From a renowned specialist at the Cleveland Clinic and medical and surgical experts in this growing field comes an up-to-date, multidisciplinary resource on transgender health care and surgery. Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient, by Dr. Cecile Unger, covers all aspects of transgender health care, beginning with epidemiology and history and progressing to an in-depth review of the complex transition for patients, including mental hea...
The Whistleblowing Guide is an incredibly comprehensive exploration of whistleblowing, the theory, the practice and the experience. It picks apart myths and identifies the public interest, commercial and safety benefits, among others, of having an effective speak up system in place. It considers that both a strong ethical culture and trust are essential to the effectiveness of an organisation's speak-up process. It examines what trust means in...
A humorous book for kids on the subject of their educators, set to be enjoyable and easy to relate to regardless of how they feel about this presence in their lives. A hybrid of fact and fiction in the vein of "The Funny Life Of Pets".
In The Great Risk Shift, Jacob S. Hacker lays bare this unsettling new economic climate, showing how it has come about, what it is doing to our families, and how we can fight back.
The author of "Horrid Henry" takes readers to the goat café - a location established by goats wherever they go due to their habit of consuming everything in their path. Anarchic humour in the tradition of Roald Dahl.
This book explores South Korean responses to the architecture of the Japanese colonial occupation of Korea and the ways that architecture illustrates the relationship between difficult heritage and the formation of national identity. Detailing the specific case of Seoul, Hyun Kyung Lee investigates how buildings are selectively destroyed, preserved, or reconstructed in order to either establish or challenge the cultural identity of places as n...
A handy Arabic to English and English to Arabic dictionary. Offering learners at home, school and in the office extensive and up-to-date coverage of Arabic and English in a compact, portable format.