Ratings12
Average rating3.2
"Designing Healthy Communities is Dr. Richard J. Jackson's call to action for all of us concerned with the health trends that are beginning to overwhelm the country. It is a companion book for the upcoming special PBS broadcast that describes how the design of the built environment impacts our health, with an additional emphasis on the inequities of social and environmental justice. In this book, Dr. Jackson explores how the built environment has contributed to the fact that two-thirds of Americans are overweight, 70 million are obese and many suffer from an array of other chronic but preventable diseases. The book and series looks upstream at the root causes of our malaise, and highlights actionable best practices based on real people with real solutions. Public health has traditionally associated the built environment with issues such as poor sanitation, lead paint poisoning and children, workplace safety, fire codes and access for persons with disabilities. We now realize that how we design the built environment may hold tremendous potential for addressing---and hopefully preventing---many of the nation's current public health concerns. The Designing Healthy Communities book offers a new perspective on the topics covered in each episode while providing a roadmap and tools for readers to effect similar positive change in their own communities. Dr. Jackson is a vibrant public speaker, highly skilled at distilling ideas to a simple and understandable conversation. Unlike textbooks on the topic, this book seeks to feel more like a conversation between Dr. Jackson and the many people he has met along the road. Through stories and examples, he will encourage readers to consider their own experience and why taking initiative to make positive change in society is important. Part 1 - Living and Leading With Purpose: Introduces the major themes that guide Dick Jackson's life and work. This section sets the stage and provides a context for understanding specific actions. In each thematic area, we move from the specific (ourselves and those close to us) to the broader view.Chapter 1: What Does Caritas Have to Do With the Built Environment?Chapter 2: What is Health and How Do We Measure It? Chapter 3: Can Built Environment Build CommunityPart 2 - A Legacy in Concrete: Each chapter details a place where Dick Jackson's ideas have been manifested. Each chapter reviews the community in the style of a medical case study: symptoms, diagnosis, cure, and prevention. This is the nuts-and-bolts of Dr. Jackson's view of public health is manifested in specific locations.Chapter 4: From Monoculture to Human Culture - curing social and environmental malnutrition: Belmar, ColoradoChapter 5: Using the Principles of New Urbanism to Build Community Prairie Crossing, IllinoisChapter 6: Saving America's downtown and local history through the political process: Charleston, South CarolinaChapter 7: Reinventing a City through Community Leadership for Sustainability: a vital part of sustainability is being healthy: Elgin, IllinoisChapter 8: Ending Car Captivity - Leadership Paths to Culture: Boulder, ColoradoChapter 9: Ports Are Rest Stops Along the Global Highway: Oakland, CaliforniaChapter 10: The city that won't give up - entrepreneurship and urban agriculture: Detroit, MichiganPart 3 - Be The Change You Want to See in the World: This section makes the case that the reader can use Dick Jackson's vision and tools to effect similar improvements in their own communities. Chapters examine how to effect change through the power of one person leading groups with purpose and working effectively to engage others. We introduce the different stakeholders in a community (government agencies, NGOs, parents, children, businesses, professionals, etc.) and discuss how they work together to achieve results.Chapter 11: What's Happening in Your Community?Chapter 12: Who Are the Players?Chapter 13: Create an Action PlanEpilogue: You are Dick Jackson"--
Featured Series
4 primary booksDark Swan is a 4-book series with 4 primary works first released in 2008 with contributions by Richelle Mead.
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This is the second book in the Dark Swan series where we find Eugenie settling into her role as Thorn Queen. In the first book we learn that Eugenie is a Fae/Fairy hunter of sorts. She really despises the “shining ones”. Her perception of them is that they love to come into the Earth realm to rape human women and take what they want. They don't belong in this world and she will send them back to their own world or to the underworld until her dying day. We also learn that she is 1) the Storm Kings daughter 2)is half Fae 3)has a half sister 4)is part of a prophecy where her first born will be the Storm King's heir and be the most powerful Fae ever. Along the way we meet Kyto a half human who morphs into a killer fox, Dorian a Fae king who helps Eugenie tap into her powers, and of course Eugenie's mom and dad. At the end of the first book Eugenie goes toe to toe with a pretty bad Fae king, kills him and then takes over his land.
Most of the second book is just Eugenie getting used to being the new Thorn Queen, meeting her subjects and adjusting to Kyto being a new father. Kyto and Eugenie fell in love in the last book and it turns out that he is waiting for a baby with another Fae queen. This book was just ok. I think what is turning me off is that there really isn't much of a story here. Because of the prophecy Eugenie is being hunted by every supernatural being in hopes that they are the ones to father her child. In this book Eugenie is kidnapped and raped by a fae prince who thinks that what he has done was ok in every sense of the word. That part was hard to read/hear because it was descriptive and the rape went on for about a week or so. In the end this fae prince is killed by Dorian and a war begins as a result of it. Eugenie breaks up with Kyto and hooks up with Dorian within a day... True enough there has been this attraction between Dorian and Eugenie since the first book but it just felt like DANG! I mean she was supposed to be in love with the Kyto and the moment she breaks up with him she jumps in Dorian's bed after being repeatedly raped about two weeks before.
Again, my biggest pet peeve is that the book doesn't seem to have much of a story or at least not enough to really keep me interested or in like with the book. It's all about SEX! Sex is good but it's all meaningless sex. I find that Eugenie is forming relationships with people but they feel empty. They don't feel real to me at all. She has this conversation with her adoptive dad where she tells him that not all fae are bad and that she has a duty to protect them as well as the humans on Earth.... but I don't feel her loyalty or her feelings growing towards them throughout the book. Even the moments were she is in tuned with the land... you should be able to feel the spiritual connection because her emotions dictate the state of the land but the way it was written didn't do it for me. You should be able to feel that connection as a reader.
As I stated in my last review, I will read the rest of the series but I'm not in a hurry to make the next book the next one I will read. Not a priority right now. I have Richell Mead's other books which are YA and will probably read it this year but the adult ones are not doing it for me at the moment.
Read at your own risk but then again you might like it!