Poorva Bhide từ Villanueva del Aceral, Ávila, Spain

poorvabhide

05/05/2024

Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách

Poorva Bhide Sách lại (10)

2019-04-19 02:30

Trò Chuyện Cùng Sky - Có Hẹn Với Bầu Trời Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều tác giả

BOOK REVIEW OUTSOURCING Legal Handbooks Series Edited by Marcus Turle with 15 contributors ISBN: 978-1-85328-839-5 Law Society Publishing www.lawsociety.org.uk TO OUTSOURCE OR NOT TO OUTSOURCE: HERE’S AN ANSWER An appreciation by Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers Future legal services are undergoing a profound change at the present time for both barristers and solicitors, so outsourcing of some services has continued to thrive in spite of one of the worst recessions in living memory, and so this book will appeal to both parts of the profession, especially with the arrival of expanded public access work for the Independent Bar. Those who supply any form of outsourcing will benefit as the government tackles the need to deliver public services while saving money. Therefore, more and more organisations look likely to become customers for outsourcing services in the relentless drive to cut costs. Under Marcus Turle’s editorship, “Outsourcing Law and Practice”, as part of the legal handbooks series from Law Society Publishing, examines the legal rules applying to outsourcing transactions across the whole sector and at how these rules operate in practice. We feel that this invaluable new book is aimed primarily at professionals responsible for structuring, procuring or managing outsourcing relationships. It deals with all aspects of the subject, from tendering, contractual models and managing risk, to more specialised issues such as tax, data security, employment law and social and environmental considerations. There are 16 chapters covering around 300 pages and the book provides the following: * Expert analysis - each chapter is focused on a specific area and is written by a specialist in the field; * Practical guidance - consideration is given throughout to the relevant law and its implications for those managing the outsourcing process; * Up-to-date coverage – “Outsourcing” explores current issues including cloud computing, the shared services agenda, and the increasing complexity and value of cross-border outsourcing arrangements. As with all these titles in the ‘Legal Handbooks’ series, Law Society Publishing continues to produce a library collection of expert, specialist books just for us as legal practitioners and/or those acting over key issues in particular sectors, greatly assisting our understanding of how the processes should work at whatever level of practitioner expertise. And that is just what we have here. The Law Society remit naturally focuses on both the practical aspects of our professional work and the requirements of the specialist legal areas. With this new legal management book on ‘Outsourcing’ the Law Society has given us some answers as to whether we should outsource, or not outsource… and the answer today is, yes, we should!

2019-04-19 06:30

Révisions 450 Nouveaux Exercices - Niveau Débutant (Kèm 1CD) Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Le Nouvel Entrainez-Vous

I read "A Million Little Pieces" before the entire scandal broke out surrounding the truthfulness of the "memoir". Even before obtaining the knowledge that the book was not 100% truthful, I found it to be an overdramatized and unrealistic account of what real life drug and alcohol rehabilitation programs are like. In many scenes in the book I felt as though Frey was self aggrandizing and in some parts even glorifying the experience of being a drug addict. He portrayed drug addicts as rough and rugged, people that have been around the block more than once. Although there is definitely some truth to this, the other side of it is that Rehab is an incredibly sad place to visit. It is filled with lost souls who due to their brain chemistry, life experiences and poor luck have no other choice or options but to admit themselves (People rarely volunteer rehab, it usually takes a severe "rock bottom" to get them there.) I feel as though Frey's book would have been a lot more powerful had he excluded the sensationalism that seemed to flood the book, much of this represented in his wriitng style (one word sentences for dramatic effect.) After the scandal was revealed and Frey's book was found to be less than non-fiction, my immediate reaction was sadness. I view this to mean that Frey has truly not recovered from his addiction, as step four in the 12 -step- program for recovering addicts is to have "made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves." This book is a reflection that Frey obviously still has some work to do. (Not that all of us don't..we just didn't write a book.) To end on a positive note, I will say that "A Million Little Pieces" did give some people a push to seek treatment for their addictions and anything that is able to motivate someone is valuable, no matter the reason behind it. New thoughts: I have been alerted by another good-reader that Frey refused to follow the 12 steps while he was in rehab (I remember this now..it has been a while since I read the book.) If the memoir was a true story, I would send an emphatic bravo over to Frey and encourage him to design his own program.. However this is not the case and I can only view this as Frey's false promise to other addicts that something other than A.A and the 12 step program will "cure" them of their demons. Sadly, thus far, for the majority of people, the 12 step program is the only successful way to long term recovery and Frey's invalidation of this process does nothing but direct people away from this track.

Người đọc Poorva Bhide từ Villanueva del Aceral, Ávila, Spain

Người dùng coi những cuốn sách này là thú vị nhất trong năm 2017-2018, ban biên tập của cổng thông tin "Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn" khuyến cáo rằng tất cả các độc giả sẽ làm quen với văn học này.