Acting for the Camera: A Teacher’s Guide is designed to help acting teachers create a hands-on course at their institution. The book provides a framework for setting up an engaging course where students can develop on-camera skills by practicing from both sides of the camera.
This textbook provides a comprehensive introduction to the key concepts of agricultural and agribusiness law in the United States, offering an accessible guide for students and professionals alike. The fully revised and updated edition addresses significant legal developments.
This volume addresses the theory and practice of Critical Thinking and Creativity (CT&C) in the... Læs mere
The Routledge Handbook of Ecotheology offers a comprehensive, up-to-date reference work dedicated to Christian ecological theology.
The volume concludes with a forward-looking discussion of CRISPR-Cas technology for pathogen detection in animals, a frontier that epitomizes the convergence of molecular biology and biotechnology in creating rapid, precise, and adaptable diagnostic platforms.
This expertly curated volume offers groundbreaking explorations for treating people who struggle with these issues, reframing problematic sexual conduct — often labelled “sex addiction” — as complex and often harmful human behaviors rather than as a disease.
This book analyses the complex relations between racism and neoliberalism in the lives of middling migrants in Poland. An empirically grounded... Læs mere
The book provides mental health practitioners with a comprehensive, evidence-based... Læs mere
With the advancement of information and communication technology, a data-driven approach applying the tools and methodologies of big data analytics has become quite common across industry.
This book is a comprehensive guide designed to help readers master the fundamentals of Bayesian statistical modeling. It offers practical insights into... Læs mere
The Routledge International Handbook of Feminist Disability Studies captures how discussions about disability have progressed since the 1990s, as well as grappling with the new debates over bodies and autonomy that are dominating various media today.
Liquid Objects: Abdulrazak Gurnah and the Material Ecologies of Water offers a consistent reading of Gurnah’s work as oceanic constellations that stretch ourdualistic assumptions of human and nonhuman matter.