Notebook by C Cher

Notebook by C Cher
Author: C Cher
Publisher: Independently Published
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2019-04-08
Genre:
ISBN: 9781093182347

This notebook journal with 110 Lined pages (8.5 x 11) inches, awaits your writing pleasure. Use it for journaling, as a diary. The choice is all yours. Enjoy! Good choice for personal used and great gift for all.Get your journal today! pages Journal Book Journal Book For Kids Journal Book For Women Journal Books Notebook Journal Boys Journal For Teens Journal For Writing Journal Lined Pages Journal Lined Paper Journal Men.

One-person Puppetry Streamlined & Simplified

One-person Puppetry Streamlined & Simplified
Author: Yvonne Amar Frey
Publisher: American Library Association
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2005
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 0838998127

Most guides to puppetry assume elaborate set-ups. With library staffing and budgets stretched thin and other curricular commitments for teachers, few have the time or resources to develop full-blown puppet performances. Frey provides a puppet alternative to enrich story times, book talks and other library events for children of all ages.

Addiction Intervention

Addiction Intervention
Author: Bruce Carruth
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 152
Release: 2014-02-04
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1317826663

Addiction Intervention: Strategies to Motivate Treatment-Seeking Behavior shows you how to use the tools of intervention--the words, the steps, and the strategies--to be a change agent in the lives of individuals with alcohol and drug addictions. It is full of effective strategies and case studies coming from widely respected specialists across several disciplines. You'll learn how you can get people to seek help for their chemical dependence, resolving the cause of their problems rather than temporarily fixing the symptoms or side effects of their addictions.Whether you're an alcohol and drug educator, intervention trainer, physician, nurse, social worker, employer, lawyer, judge, or counselor, Addiction Intervention will help you find ways to confront chemically dependent people and motivate them to change their lives. You will find the tools of intervention easier to wield than you might otherwise think as you read about: how physicians can assess symptoms using various diagnostic tools, initiate conversation with a patient, and overcome resistance to referral how clinical therapists can develop response-specific intervention strategies that are appropriate to clients’behavior pathology conducting effective performance-related workplace interventions the development and design of impaired professional committees alternative models for peer and administrative interventions the methodologies of student assistance programs and teams brief, structured therapy for the family of an addicted person recent changes in the criminal justice system that have encouraged judges to refer individuals to treatment the One-Stop Re-Employment Social Services Center Addiction Intervention brings within your reach results-oriented intervention. Don't continue to offer band-aid solutions or skirt around the real problem of addiction. This book will help you help people get their lives back on track permanently.

Court News

Court News
Author: California. Administrative Office of the Courts
Publisher:
Total Pages: 32
Release: 1995
Genre: Court administration
ISBN:

Creating the Customer-Driven Academic Library

Creating the Customer-Driven Academic Library
Author: Jeannette Woodward
Publisher: American Library Association
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2009
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0838909760

In this book, the author attacks these and other pressing issues facing today's academic librarians. Her trailbrazing strategies centre on keeping the customer's point of view in focus at all times to help you to integrate technology to meet today's student and faculty needs.

Enforcing Freedom

Enforcing Freedom
Author: Kerwin Kaye
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 525
Release: 2019-12-17
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0231547099

In 1989, the first drug-treatment court was established in Florida, inaugurating an era of state-supervised rehabilitation. Such courts have frequently been seen as a humane alternative to incarceration and the war on drugs. Enforcing Freedom offers an ethnographic account of drug courts and mandatory treatment centers as a system of coercion, demonstrating how the state uses notions of rehabilitation as a means of social regulation. Situating drug courts in a long line of state projects of race and class control, Kerwin Kaye details the ways in which the violence of the state is framed as beneficial for those subjected to it. He explores how courts decide whether to release or incarcerate participants using nominally colorblind criteria that draw on racialized imagery. Rehabilitation is defined as preparation for low-wage labor and the destruction of community ties with “bad influences,” a process that turns participants against one another. At the same time, Kaye points toward the complex ways in which participants negotiate state control in relation to other forms of constraint in their lives, sometimes embracing the state’s salutary violence as a means of countering their impoverishment. Simultaneously sensitive to ethnographic detail and theoretical implications, Enforcing Freedom offers a critical perspective on the punitive side of criminal-justice reform and points toward alternative paths forward.