doi:10.1002/9781118539613.ch2Sustainabilitywood usesforest resourcesillegal loggingharvestingresponsible purchasingCoulson, JimJohn Wiley & Sons, Ltd
University of Surrey, UKCoyle, AdrianUniversity of Surrey, UKJohn Wiley & Sons, LtdMilton, M., Craven, M. & Coyle, A. (2010). Understanding human distress: Moving beyond the concept of `psychopathology'. In: M. Milton (Ed.), Therapy and Beyond: Counselling Psychology Contributions to ...
The concept of ‘Beautiful China’ is a new goal of ecological construction in the new era of socialism and aims to meet the needs of people as they strive for a better life. National land spatial planning is one major component of the Chinese state’s o
For most travellers, the journey from checkin at HKG to The Pier lounges involves a short ride on the airport’s Automated People Mover (APM), or a leisurely 20-minute stroll if you’re not in a hurry and walking from the ‘top’ of Terminal 1 – where you pass through immigration a...
The Ecological Footprint evaluates the difference between the availability of renewable resources and the extent of human consumption of these resources. Over the past few decades, historical records have shown an accelerated decline in the availability
Some eighty years after Husserl's The Crisis of the European Sciences, yet another crisis looms over Europe. However, this haunting crisis – and one could here question the value of the word 'crisi...doi:10.1080/09672559.2021.1873544Joseph Cohen...
p. 37. See also Michele Barrett, ‘The Concept of “Difference”’, Feminist Review , 26, July 1987, p. 31.Barrett, Michèle. ‘The Concept of Difference’ Feminist Review 26 (1987): 29–41....
dictatorship of the proletariatMarxLeninStalinThe thesis of this paper is that even some of the most fundamental concepts of Marxism have been used and abused to fit their advocates‘ purposes. More specifically, the interpretation of the concept of the "dictatorship of the proletariat" ...
doi:10.1111/j.1835-9310.1975.tb00905.xTHOMSON, DONALDBlackwell Publishing LtdMankind
What emerges is a more sophisticated appreciation of art than has been realized. Of particular value as evidence are the royal inventories, which reveal not only the types of art collected, but also the manner of its display. The approaches adopted here, it is argued, have wider applications ...