Service Animals Books


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Related Subjects: Dogs
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Service Animals Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Service Animals
Bandit: The Heart-Warming True Story of One Dog's Rescue from Death Row
Published in Paperback by Skyhorse Publishing (2007-08)
Author: Vicki Hearne
List price: $14.95
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Average review score:

Get this book, now!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
Just like her other book, Animal Happiness, Vicki Hearne really makes you care for Bandit another animal outcast that she rescues. Hearne goes to court and fights for this dog. This is a great, heart-warming tale that any animal lover will fall in love with.

Service Animals
Ben the Postbear
Published in Hardcover by Gingham Dog Press (2005-05-11)
Author: Carol Ottolenghi
List price: $10.95
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Average review score:

Ben the Postbear
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-13
This is a very cute book. My 2 year old grandson just loves it and can't wait to open each item featured on each page. I recommened it.

Service Animals
Using food processing by-products for animal feed (CD)
Published in Unknown Binding by N.C. Cooperative Extension Service (1991)
Author: R. G Crickenberger
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Average review score:

International relations, sweet and sour
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-15
In an era where America is the last remaining superpower, it is sometimes easy to feel that there are no real threats left in the world to American security (apart from the occasional terrorist, that is); it is easy to slip into a complacency a la the British Empire in thinking itself impregnable due to its relative insularity from the rest of the world (truly, for a variety of reasons, Canada and Mexico pose no real threats to America) and the power it is able to wield abroad. Of course, there are many countries, geographic areas, economic coalitions, and military alliances in the world, both real and potential, that could pose a major threat to the America. Thus, it is important that in this period of relative hegemonic success, Americans do not become insular in thinking.

This is a rather long preamble to introduce a book of importance, 'The United States and China', by John King Fairbank. When I first studied political science as an undergraduate, I had completed the requirements for my primary major without having once heard a lecture or participated in a discussion of any substance on the topic of China. Perhaps this is because the prominence of the Soviet Union in the superpower relations, and most political scientists when discussing international relations preferred to focus on economic powers (Japan, Western Europe, emerging markets and resource-rich areas), or on comparative democracies, both of which do not include China. China has been, and continues to be, a mystery in most Western eyes, including those of scholars and political strategists.

It has only been with the breakup of the Soviet Union that the prominence of China has been increased. No longer is it considered a backwater; no longer is it ignored save in relation to American interests in Taiwan. Even at the height of the conflicts in Vietnam and Korea, the West had very limited knowledge of China. As mysteriously enigmatic as the Soviet Union might have been, it was still essentially Western in orientation and ambition; the Western powers could be reasonable sure that discussions with and strategies against the Soviet Union would proceed on the same framework of thought. Despite China now being a Marxist-inspired regime, it is still essentially Eastern, with an historical and philosophical underpinning vastly different from the West. China is one of few civilisations to survive that arose as an independent urban culture from the mists of prehistory; it is the only one that has retained a powerful position.

Due to it's relative isolation from the rest of the world, and its now millennium-old concentration on the preservation of cultural integrity against outside forces (which produces a very strange dynamic with the introduction of Marxist and Western radical political ideas), China has remained focussed upon internal situations.

'The strength of China's age-old family system has made it a target of the modern revolution. New loyalties to nation and to party have countered the claims of familism, but not always successfully.'

Fifty years of Marxism still has not managed to replace the old ways. Perhaps one reason why pro-democracy ideas do not have more urgency in China is that this, too, is a foreign concept.

Bounded by the Himalayas, the vast Mongolian steppes and plateaus, the Siberian hinterlands, and the Pacific Ocean, China remains a large area of relative isolation. China has vast resources, but only recently had the capacity to exploit them in any systematic and useful way. The land is used almost entirely for grain-food cultivation, made even more necessary by the continuing population explosion. Even with this high percentage of grain agriculture focus (90% versus 40% for America), China cannot support itself. Livestock is a rarity (only 2% of farmland is used for this, as opposed to nearly 50% of American farmland for this purpose).

China had its own renaissance, several hundred years before the Italian Renaissance that sparked the development in the West that led to our present age. However (and perhaps it was due to the lack of necessity that China failed to continue this development whereas Western nations, always at threat from each other, were required to for survival) China ceased to make technological and economic advances on a significant scale, and retreated into a thousand year decline. By the time the European powers shipping arrived in Chinese ports in the 1800s, Chinese power was no match for even small numbers of these new powers.

John King Fairbank first wrote the book 'The United States and China' in 1948, recognising the lack of good information, historically and politically, about China. It has been revised a number of times, taking into account more scholarship and learning, as well as the developments in relationship with China (the Korean conflict, the Vietnamese conflict, the 'reopening' of China, continuing tensions with regard to Taiwan). Fairbank in his introduction states that he produced this work in the hopes of a greater peace between East and West; sadly, that has not been the case. With the re-emergence of China into international affairs, trade, and military consideration, there is a question which remains about future peace with China. Fairbank, who was a professor of history at Harvard, has always been regarded an expert source in Chinese history, analysis of Chinese society, and Sino-Chinese relations. This book contains elements of all of these.

For a greater understanding of China, for the interested CNN-watcher to the student of politics and international relations, this book is a valuable resource.

Service Animals
Child Abuse, Domestic Violence, and Animal Abuse: Linking the Circles of Compassion for Prevention and Intervention
Published in Hardcover by Purdue University Press (1999-04)
Author:
List price: $42.95
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Average review score:

Thorough Review of Literature
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-08
This book is very abundant in resarch and exploration of the link between animal abuse and intimate violence. Addtionally, they focus on children and pet-care programs in the latter part of the book. This portion is signifcant since these programs assist in preventing further domestic violence and animal abuse. Frank Ascione and Phil Arkow produced a very good book, and this book should be read by all within the domestic violence field, vetererians, and law enforcement officials.

Service Animals
Mineral nutrition of grazing cattle in Oklahoma (Circular / Cooperative Extension Service, Division of Agriculture, Oklahoma State University)
Published in Unknown Binding by Cooperative Extension Service, Division of Agriculture, Oklahoma State University (1991)
Author: Keith S Lusby
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Average review score:

Brillant, but don't misread it
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-21
This book was intended to be the first volume in a series that went up to WWI, but for obvious reasons Dr. Kissinger never finished the series. Many people have read this book and asserted that Metternich and Co. offered Kissinger his diplomatic roots, when in fact this is wrong. Do not read this book to understand Kissinger, read it to understand an often misunderstood era in history. Kissinger understood it better than anyone.

Service Animals
The Cry of Nature; An Appeal to Mercy and to Justice on Behalf of the Persecuted Animals (Mellen Animal Rights Library, V. 8)
Published in Hardcover by Edwin Mellen Press (2000-11)
Author: John Oswald
List price: $89.95
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Average review score:

Give us the opportunity
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-18
The five-star rating is a projection. How can one write a review of a slim, 70 page book, when neither I or my library can afford to buy it? What is going on here? Who does not want us to read it?

Service Animals
The Design of Animal Experiments: Reducing the Use of Animals in Research Through Better Experimental Design (Laboratory Animal Handbooks)
Published in Paperback by Royal Society of Medicine Press (2002-01)
Authors: Michael Francis Wogan Festing, Philip Overend, Rose Gaines Das, Mario Cortina Borja, and Manuel Berdoy
List price: $28.00
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Average review score:

A good place to begin with.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-26
This book covers especifically the interphase between laboratory animal science and experimental design. Written by British biostatistians with excellent training in animal experiments, this book for me was an excellent help in writing a manuscript for an ASM (American society for Microbiology) peer-reviewed magazine. It is the perfect companion for a more statistical textbook in DOE. Concepts are so intuitive and clarly explained especially for the non-math trained.

Service Animals
Elephants and Ethics: Toward a Morality of Coexistence
Published in Hardcover by The Johns Hopkins University Press (2008-06-17)
Author:
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Average review score:

Deserves a place in not only college-level natural history libraries, but in collections strong in ecology and ethics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-11
Compiled and co-edited by Chyristen Wemmer and Catherine Christen, "Elephants and Nature: Toward a Morality of CoExistence" is a fascinating history of human and elephant interactions that blends science, nature and ethics into a complex and informative discussion powered by an international team of experts who review the history of human-elephant relations and its impact on elephant, human, and the world. Any holding strong in elephant natural history will find it an important review of the world history of the elephant, its use and abuse by humans, and the joined issues of habitat use and impact. A powerful title, "Elephants and Nature: Toward a Morality of CoExistence" deserves a place in not only college-level natural history libraries, but in collections strong in ecology and ethics.

Service Animals
Encyclopedia of Animal Rights and Animal Welfare
Published in Hardcover by Greenwood Press (1998-06-30)
Author:
List price: $85.00
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Average review score:

Excellent resource for all animal issues
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-18
I am the major editor of this work. I just wanted to inform interested parties that this Encyclopedia has sold 1500 copies in the first 4 weeks it's been available.

Service Animals
Ethics and the Beast: A Speciesist Argument for Animal Liberation
Published in Hardcover by Princeton University Press (2007-08-27)
Author: Tzachi Zamir
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

Intelligent and succinct
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
This is a delightful little book, which covers a great deal of ground in a small space and with utmost clarity and simplicity of style. I should at once qualify that last phrase as meaning that the book would be simple and clear to someone who is at ease reading analytic philosophy. The book's methodology is another attractive feature for its relative novelty, for the author minimizes the importance of defending some supreme principle of morality in favor of arguing on the basis of widely shared assumptions about right and wrong. This is definitely a selling point for a work than deals with a topic of urgent practical importance, like this one on the human treatment of other animals, since there isn't going to be any agreement about the supreme principle of morality any time soon. Despite the pragmatic bent, however, this book is jam-packed with subtle theoretical insights. It's really a wonderful book. and to invert a Groucho Marx (via Woody Allen) joke: I recommend this book because it is very satisfying to read and it's so short!


Books-Under-Review-->Society-->Disabled-->Service Animals-->9
Related Subjects: Dogs
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