Tag: Fitness

Encyclopaedia of Wrestling Techniques, Exercises, Fitness and Health Education (2024)


Free Download Harphool Singh – Encyclopaedia of Wrestling: Techniques, Exercises, Fitness and Health Education
Discovery Publishing House | 2001 | ISBN: 8171416225 | English | 435 pages | PDF | 198.72 MB
The Encyclopaedia of Wrestling is a revised Edition of my previous book Modem Wrestling (Adhunik Mallyuddh) as I have received the National reward and appreciation letter from Hon’ble Mr. Milan Ercegan the FILA President during Atlanta 1996. The matter of this book have been extended up to 416 pages from 273, pasting new photographs, with the up-to-date International Wrestling Rules booklet of FILA & FIWA (newly formed body). As the book contains the Topics such as; Health for lay people-health and fitness, How to become an Olympian Wrestler? Practice-Natural and Scientific Exercises, Balance Diet, Proper Rest, Competitions, National and International Wrestling, World History of Wrestling and various types of combats of the globe, Automatic Exercises for the wrestlers and recreational games, reducing fatness, weight control, warming up and cooling down, injuries of wrestling 500 National and International holds of Free Style, Greco-Roman and Oriental Style Wrestling, holds drill, immetation, Psychology and Career of the wrestlers and so on. I hope this book will prove useful for the world wrestlers, referees, coaches, health lovers, and lay people whose valuable suggestions are always awaited.

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Fitness to Plead International and Comparative Perspectives


Free Download Ronnie Mackay, "Fitness to Plead: International and Comparative Perspectives "
English | ISBN: 0198788479 | 2018 | 368 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
The law relating to fitness to plead is an increasingly important area of the criminal law. While criminalization may be justified whenever an offender commits a sufficiently serious moral wrong requiring that he or she be called to account, the doctrine of fitness to plead calls this principle into question in the case of a person who lacks the capacity or ability to participate meaningfully in a criminal trial. In light of the emerging focus on capacity-based approaches to decision-making and the international human rights requirement that the law should treat defendants fairly, this volume offers a benchmark for the theory and practice of fitness to plead, providing readers with a unique opportunity to consider differing perspectives and debate on the future development and direction of a doctrine which has up till now been under-discussed and under-researched.

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