Youngest person to ever graduate from her high school and college, Delta becomes the first woman to join a special ops military team. Everything comes easy to her. She speaks many languages, has great battle tactic, and she has the ability to protect herself and her team in most situations.Delta also has a strange gift that takes her on a journey through the Middle East. Desperate to please a father she hardly ever sees and guilt-ridden over the death of her mother, she searches for something she doesn't even know she needs. When her good friend is murdered, she goes off the deep end to find vengeance, only to be hunted by her own team. They have orders to take her back into the fold or eliminate the threat she represents.Can she overcome her background and find what she seeks with her team, or will she embrace the side of her that says she is all-powerful and can do as she pleases? Only one way will lead her to what she truly needs.
« Watson and Hartley here argue that political liberalism is a feminist liberalism. They hold that political liberals should accept a restrictive account of public reason and that political liberals' account of public justification is superior to the leading alternative, the convergence account. They argue that political liberalism's core commitments restrict all reasonable conceptions of justice to those that secure genuine, substantive equality for women and other subordinated groups. Here they show how public reason arguments can be used to support law and policy needed to address historical sites of women's subordination in order to advance equality; in particular, they focus on the cases of prostitution, the gendered division of labor and marriage. »--Page 4 de la couverture.
From the migration of the Aztecs to the rise of the empire and its eventual demise, this book covers Aztec history in full, analyzing conceptions of time, religion, and more through codices to offer an inside look at daily life. This book focuses on two main areas: Aztec history and Aztec culture. Early chapters deal with Aztec history—the first providing a visual record of the story of the Aztec migration and search for their destined homeland of Tenochtitlan, and the second exploring how the Aztecs built their empire. Later chapters explain life in the Aztec world, focusing on Aztec conceptions of time and religion, the Aztec economy, the life cycle, and daily life. The book ends with an account of the fall of the empire, as illustrated by Aztec artists. With sections concerning a wide variety of topics—from the Aztec pantheon to war, agriculture, childhood, marriage, diet, justice, the arts, and sports, among many others—readers will gain an expansive understanding of life in the Aztec world.
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