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Computer and Communication Networks, 2nd Edition
Nader Mir
An 810-page text book, with a successful word-wide university adoption record of its 1st edition first establishes a solid foundation in basic computer networking concepts, TCP/IP schemes, wireless networking, Internet applications, and network security. Next, Mir delves into the mathematical analysis of networks, as well as advanced networking protocols. Students and researchers will find up-to-date, comprehensive coverage of: Packet-switched networks and Internet protocols, including IPv6 Links LAN protocols Wireless networks (Wi-Fi and 4G LTE) Transport protocols Applications and management Network security Delay analysis Network QoS High-speed network protocols VoIP and multimedia networking Optical networks Multicasting protocols Voice/video compression Sensor/mesh networks Router/switching system design, and more. Department of Electrical Engineering
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The Setup Man
Nicholas Taylor
Published under the pseudonym T.T. Monday, THE SETUP MAN is the first in a series of crime novels set in San Jose featuring the relief pitcher / detective Johnny Adcock. The second novel in the series, DOUBLE SWITCH, will be published in Spring 2016. Department of English and Comparative Literature, Steinbeck Center
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Basic Biostatistics: Statistics for Public Health Practice
B. Burt Gerstman
Basic Biostatistics is a concise, introductory text that covers biostatistical principles and focuses on the common types of data encountered in public health and biomedical fields. The text puts equal emphasis on exploratory and confirmatory statistical methods. Sampling, exploratory data analysis, estimation, hypothesis testing, and power and precision are covered through detailed, illustrative examples. Department of Health Science and Recreation
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The Human Rights Enterprise
William Armaline
This book presents a framework for understanding human rights as a terrain of struggle over power between states, private interests, and organized, “bottom-up” social movements. The authors develop a critical sociology of human rights, focusing on the concept of the Human Rights Enterprise: the process through which rights are defined and realized. While states are designated arbiters of human rights according to human rights instruments, they do not exist in a vacuum. Political sociology helps us to understand how global neoliberalism and powerful non-governmental actors (particularly economic actors such as corporations and financial institutions) deeply affect states’ ability and likelihood to enforce human rights standards. Department of Justice Studies
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Polls, Expectations, and Elections: TV News Making in U.S. Presidential Campaigns
Richard Craig
In modern American presidential campaigning, scholars and citizens have bemoaned the effects of electronic media on voters. Much has been written about the effects of television ads, media management, perceived bias, and other issues, yet one element of today’s media environment that most Americans would recognize has not been identified in the public mind: expectation setting. Journalists regularly tell audiences what actions candidates should take on the campaign trail, based solely on whether they’re leading or trailing in public opinion polls. Polls, Expectations, and Elections: TV News Making in U.S. Presidential Campaigns follows the rise and proliferation of this phenomenon through a comprehensive content analysis of transcripts of CBS Evening News broadcasts during presidential election campaigns from 1968–2012. Richard Craig uses numerous examples from these transcripts to illustrate how television news has gone from simply reporting poll data to portraying it as nearly the only motivation for anything candidates do while campaigning. He argues that with the combination of heightened coverage of campaigns and the omnipresence of poll data, campaign coverage has largely become a day-to-day series of contests, with candidates portrayed as succeeding or failing each day to meet “expectations” of what the candidate at a given position in the polls should do on the campaign trail. Highlighting the change in news media and candidate coverage, Polls, Expectations, and Elections will appeal to scholars of media studies, political communication, and journalism.
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Resistive, Capacitive, Inductive, and Magnetic Sensor Technologies
Winncy Du
Resistive, Capacitive, Inductive, and Magnetic Sensor Technologies examines existing, new, and novel sensor technologies and—through real-world examples, sample problems, and practical exercises—illustrates how the related science and engineering principles can be applied across multiple disciplines, offering greater insight into various sensors’ operating mechanisms and practical functions. The book assists readers in understanding resistive, capacitive, inductive, and magnetic (RCIM) sensors, as well as sensors with similar design concepts, characteristics, and circuitry. Department of Mechanical Engineering
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Cognitive Communication Disorders
Michael L. Kimbarow
Cognitive Communication Disorders, now in its second edition, is the definitive core text for graduate courses that address cognitively based communicative disorders. This text provides up-to-date knowledge on the normal cognitive processes that support communication, cognitive linguistic communication disorders, clinical management, as well as the impact that deficits in these cognitive domains may have on language and communication - including right hemisphere disorders, Alzheimer disease and related disorders, and traumatic brain injury. Furthermore, through contributions from a renowned group of contributors, this text provides a comprehensive review of theoretical and applied research on the cognitive processes of attention, memory, and executive function.
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Ending Extreme Inequality: An Economic Bill of Rights to Eliminate Poverty
Scott Myers-Lipton
Poverty and inequality are at record levels. Today, forty-seven million Americans live in poverty, while middle class incomes are in decline. The top 20 percent now controls 89 percent of all wealth. These conditions have renewed demands for a new Economic Bill of Rights, an American idea proposed by Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and Martin Luther King Jr. The new Economic Bill of Rights has a coherent plan and proclaims that all Americans have the right to a job, a living wage, a decent home, adequate medical care, a good education, and adequate protection from economic fears of unemployment, sickness, and old age. Integrating the latest economic and social data, this new book explores each of these rights. Each chapter includes an analysis of the social problems surrounding each right, a historical overview of the attempts to implement these rights, and assessments of current solutions offered by citizens, community groups, and politicians. These contemporary, real-life solutions to inequality can inspire students and citizens to become involved and open pathways toward a more just society. Department of Sociology and Interdisciplinary Social Sciences
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Seismic Design of Building Structures: A Professional's Introduction to Earthquake Forces and Design Details
Michael R. Lindeburg and Kurt M. McMullin
Seismic Design of Building Structures presents the seismic design concepts most essential to engineers, architects, and students of civil and structural engineering, and architecture. The book’s 15 chapters provide a concise but thorough review of seismic theory, code application, design principles, and structural analysis. The 30 example problems demonstrate how to apply concepts, codes, and equations to solve realistic problems. More than 125 practice problems provide opportunities for independent problem-solving practice, and complete solutions allow you to check your solution approach.
This book includes two comprehensive indexes—one of key terms and another of seismic building codes—to quickly direct you to the information you are looking for. You can also locate related support material by following references throughout the text to the 150 equations, 29 tables, 144 figures, and 16 appendices, and to relevant codes and standards.
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Screenwriting for Neurotics
Scott Sublett
A quirky guide for beginning screenwriters that not only covers technique, but also the psychological pitfalls faced by all writers. Department of Radio-Television-Film and Theatre
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José Martí, the United States, and Race
Anne Fountain
This book offers a comprehensive study of what José Martí wrote about race and race relations, in the context of nineteenth century North American life. Martí is Cuba's national hero and lived in the United States for nearly fifteen years (1880-1895). It brings together a careful reading of Martí’s Complete Works (28 vols.) and extensive research in American history. Department of World Languages and Literatures
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Education for the Joy of It: How to Thrive Not Just Survive in High School, College and Beyond
Robert J. Pellegrini
This book is targeted to all current or prospective high school students, college students, or anyone else who aspires to strengthen the educational foundation upon which to build the rest of her/his life -- with the hope that it is especially helpful to people who might otherwise become, or have already been formal educational program dropouts or lockouts. I cannot guarantee that applying what is offered here will ensure an “A” grade, or achievement of one’s life goals. But I do guarantee that I have tried to summarize critical elements of thought, feeling, and action oriented to such objectives.
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Advances in Global Leadership, Volume 8
Joyce Osland
This edited volume contributes to bridging and integrating conceptual and practitioner perspectives that yield a deeper understanding of the variables associated with effective global leadership and its development. The book advances foundational research in a nascent but critical field of study. The book has been chosen as one of the four finalists for the annual University of San Diego's Outstanding Leadership Book Award. School of Global Innovation & Leadership
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Civic Pedagogies in Higher Education Teaching for Democracy in Europe, Canada and the USA
Jason Laker
In this text, university teachers from Eastern Europe, Western Europe and North America report on their efforts to prepare students for engaged democratic citizenship. Their case studies illustrate methods employed to prepare citizens for meaningful participation in democracies, whether long-standing, young or emerging. The contributors describe their approaches in detail, reflecting on the philosophical and pedagogical considerations being employed, as well as exploring models of experiential service-learning, action research, and other curricular innovations. Department of Counselor Education
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Citizenship, Democracy and Higher Education in Europe, Canada and the USA
Jason Laker
Higher Education is a steward of socialization, a facilitator of social mobility, and a provocateur eliciting individuals' and societies' unrealized potential, mainly through its graduates. But as globalization continues to blur individual, institutional and national boundaries, there are calls from and to multiple sectors to articulate productive methods for achieving the ideals of democracy and social cohesion. This text is intended to contemplate the conceptual frameworks and policy imperatives facing post-secondary/tertiary sector educational institutions in preparing citizens for meaningful participation in democracies, whether long-standing, young or emerging. Department of Counselor Education
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Innovation in Public Transport Finance: Property Value Capture
Shishir Mathur
With all levels of governments under significant fiscal stress, any new transit funding mechanism is to be welcomed. Value capture (VC) is one such mechanism, which involves the identification and capture of a public infrastructure-led increase in property value. This book reviews four major VC mechanisms: joint development projects; special assessment districts; impact fees; and tax increment financing. Through the study of prominent examples of these VC mechanisms from across the US and around the world, this book evaluates their performance focusing on aspects such as equity, revenue-generating potential, stakeholder support, and the legal and policy environment. It also conducts a comparative assessment of VC mechanisms to help policy makers and practitioners to choose one, or a combination of VC mechanisms. Department of Urban and Regional Planning
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The Woman's Film of the 1940s: Gender, Narrative, and History
Alison McKee
This book explores the relationship among gender, desire, and narrative in 1940s "woman’s films" as they navigate the terrain between public history and private experience. The woman’s film and other form of cinematic melodrama have often been understood as positioning themselves outside history; this book challenges and modifies that understanding, contextualizing the films it considers against the backdrop of World War II. Department of Television-Radio-Film and Theatre
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Belmont
Cynthia K. McCarthy
Midway between San Francisco and San José, Belmont is where an Italian count reconstructed his villa transported from Italy, where a silver king created “the White House of the West,” and where the Warlocks, a fledgling 1960s rock band, honed the sound they would make famous under another name, the Grateful Dead. Spanish explorers called Belmont’s vales “la Cañada del Diablo,” or “the Devil’s Canyon,” either after the locally famous winds or because the native Ohlone believed the canyon to be inhabited by spirits. Belmont’s historic advantage of being on the bay side of the shortest route to the Pacific coast meant easier access to another type of spirits during Prohibition, fueling a minor red-light district across the tracks on Old County Road. A century or more ago, Belmont’s wooded hills attracted sanitariums and prep schools. Today, its woods and trails draw residents from more developed neighboring towns. University Library
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Secrets and Democracy: from arcana imperii to Wikileaks
Lawrence Quill
As governments actively collect and analyze more information about their populations than ever before, citizens struggle to defend their privacy, and to determine which state secrets are legitimate and which are not. Jurisdictional complexity, the inability of representatives to gain access to relevant information, citizens’ relative lack of expertise, and the partisanship that exists between different government agencies make oversight difficult. Secrecy and Democracy considers afresh the role that secrets plays within liberal democracies and the impact this has on the public’s ‘right to know,’ the individual’s ‘right to privacy,’ and the government’s penchant for secrecy and data collection. Department of Political Science
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Soy Sauce for Beginners
Kirstin Chen
Gretchen Lin, adrift at the age of thirty, leaves her floundering marriage in San Francisco to move back to her childhood home in Singapore and immediately finds herself face-to-face with the twin headaches she’s avoided her entire adult life: her mother’s drinking problem and the machinations of her father’s artisanal soy sauce business. In the midst of increasing pressure from her father to remain permanently in Singapore—and pressure from her mother to do just the opposite—Gretchen must decide whether she will return to her marriage and her graduate studies at the San Francisco Conservatory, or sacrifice everything and join her family’s crusade to spread artisanal soy sauce to the world.
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Sound Patterns of Hindi
Manjari Ohala
This book addresses a number of issues in the phonetics/phonology of Hindi using a variety of experimental methods--from phonetics (physiological/acoustic/perceptual) to psycholinguistic. Department of Linguistics and Language Development
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How Real is Race? A Sourcebook on Race, Culture and Biology, 2nd Edition
Carol Mukhopadhyay, Rosemary Henze, and Yolanda T. Moses
How Real is Race? A Sourcebook on Race, Culture and Biology employs an activity-oriented approach to address the question How REAL is race? What is biological fact, what is fiction, and where does culture, enter? What do we mean when we say race is a “social construction? Department of Anthropology, Department of Linguistics and Language Development
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Discovering Accounting
Helen Brubeck
Discovering Accounting is an introductory accounting electronic textbook created as part of SJSU's Textbook Alternatives Project, giving students a high quality text at a low cost. The book will also come into use as part of the iPad Initiative. Department of Accounting & Finance
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The Occasionist
Curt Anderson
Book of poems delving into the interplay of language and humor as addressed to personal and public events. The work was written over several years and seeks to be both poignant and playful. College of International and Extended Studies
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Kevin Moore's Hail Mary Pass: Into the End Zone with the 49ers in Levi's Stadium
Michael Fallon
This book is the story of one man’s journey to realize his dream of bringing a professional sports team to his hometown, the little Mission City of St. Clare. Like beads on a rosary, some 70 episodes recount the behind-the-scenes tales from failed Giants and As campaigns to the ultimate achievement of securing a new home for the SF49ERS in the new Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, CA. Department of Sociology and Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, Center for Community Learning & Leadership
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