Category: Textbooks

Thinking and Writing About Law - eBook
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Original price was: $19.66.Current price is: $0.00.
While Thinking and Writing About Law, (MOBI) is primarily geared toward law students, it should be available to anyone who wants to improve their abilities in legal analysis and communication. Written in a no-nonsense style, approachable, the ebook is divided into two parts. The first section guides readers toward an
Cases in Human Resource Management - eBook
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Original price was: $31.36.Current price is: $6.00.
Cases in Human Resource Management, (PDF/AZW3) offers college students with insights into common dilemmas, challenges, and issues human resource managers face in the workplace. Using an extensive variety of well-known companies and organizations, author David Kimball involves students with original, real-world cases that show HRM topics and functions in action.
Manipal Manual Of Surgery (4th Edition) - eBook
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Original price was: $48.96.Current price is: $10.00.
This is the entirely revised, thoroughly rewritten, and carefully revised edition of the popular Manual, specially targeted at the undergraduate medical students. The restricted time-frame available to the undergraduate students makes it necessary for them to be able to read a good complete ebook reliably, and this edition fully meets
Introductory Statistics (9th Edition) - eBook
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Original price was: $200.00.Current price is: $15.00.
Prem Mann’s Introductory Statistics, 9th Edition is written for a one or two semester first course in applied statistics and is intended for college students who do not have a strong background in mathematics. The only prerequisite is knowledge of elementary algebra. Introductory Statistics 9e is known for its clarity
Sentencing: A Social Process: Re-thinking Research and Policy - eBook
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Original price was: $56.99.Current price is: $9.00.
Tata’s Sentencing: A Social Process, (PDF) asks how we should make sense of sentencing when, despite huge efforts worldwide to analyze, critique, and reform it, it remains an enigma. Sentencing: A Social Process shows how both research and policy-thinking about sentencing are confined by a paradigm that presumes autonomous individualism,