Using seventeen cases where researchers applied behavioral interventions in the field, this book identifies not only what works but also what does not work (and why).
Sustainable Communities for a Healthy Planet considers what it takes to cultivate human and planetary health in a time of rapid ecological, economic, and social change.
This updated and unabridged edition of The Stones of Venice introduces new readers to John Ruskin’s classic Victorian text.
The third edition of this textbook provides a coherent history of the West, pointing students to major issues and modelling how historians interpret and use evidence.
The third edition of this bestselling textbook provides a coherent history of the West, pointing students to major issues and modelling how historians interpret and use evidence.
This multifaceted and comprehensive book examines the brutal twentieth-century tragedies that took place at Babyn Yar, a ravine on the outskirts of Kyiv in modern-day Ukraine.
Illuminating how our brain and body engage with our surroundings, Constructing Health answers urgent questions about the role of architecture in creating and maintaining health.
This book presents a rethinking of Greek philosophy to offer the West a path to a more holistic and less conceptual understanding of the way things are.
From graphic journalist Dan Archer comes an eye-opening investigation into human trafficking and a compelling account of how to tell stories in ways that educate and empower.
This book explores how Vladimir Nabokov wove his deep love of trees throughout all his works, granting them a powerful role in the development of his most significant themes.
Drawing on economics, management, and innovation literatures, this book explores how new technologies can be managed and created.
Drawing on unexplored archival material, The Black Box traces the rise and demise of an elite Nova Scotia family through four generations of women.