Stalingrad, Verdun, Tours...these sites hosted some of the most brutal battles history, many of them even changing the course of their wars. We all know who won the battles, but how did they do it? How were some able to use their small numbers to bring empires to their knees, and how did some empires use cunning and brute force to conquer a land in the span of a few years? Read on, and you'll see that great military minds, regardless of their size and background, will usually find a way to overcome the odds and win.
Stalingrad, Verdun, Tours...these sites hosted some of the most brutal battles history, many of them even changing the course of their wars. We all kn...
In this book, I share some of the reflections I've experienced as I've sat quietly with God and given myself to commune with Him (my God Time).
My hope is that the reader will be encouraged to sit with God, to set aside any personal agenda, to allow God to lead wherever He will, and to draw you further into intimacy with Him.
In this book, I share some of the reflections I've experienced as I've sat quietly with God and given myself to commune with Him (my God Time).
Why does so much crime and victimisation remain invisible and what can be done about it? This is the central tenet of Invisible Crimes and Social Harms, a ground-breaking new collection of chapters, in the Palgrave Macmillan series Critical Criminological Perspectives. Invisible Crimes and Social Harms explores the reasons for the continuing invisibility of much crime and harm and the lack of adequate response, explains how various injustices have become more visible or rendered less so over time and place, and explores what can be done to connect the intellectual with...
Why does so much crime and victimisation remain invisible and what can be done about it? This is the central tenet of Invisible Crimes and Social ...