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With stunning beaches, world-class golf, rich history, delicious cuisine, and no shortage of Southern Hospitality, South Carolina provides an incredible backdrop to live a fulfilled and abundant retirement. It also offers a unique set of challenges. Adam Curran, CFP®, believes each and every Palmetto State retiree ought to have a living, breathing, and dynamic retirement plan designed specifically for life in their ever-changing state. In his latest book, Retire Y'all: Your Guide to Retiring in South Carolina, he shoots straight on all matters retirement: changing tax law, market conditions, investment strategy, real estate, health care, and more! A good retirement plan gives retirees the permission and confidence to spend money to create meaningful experiences, without the fear of outliving living their savings. After all, no one wants to wind up the wealthiest person in the cemetery. Throughout the book, Adam drives home the message that the result of good financial planning means you can finally reap the rewards of years of grinding and saving and truly enjoy all of South Carolina has to offer. The book is short and sweet, written and designed to be read in just one or two sittings. With quick, digestible chapters you'll learn exactly what you need to know as you embark on this new chapter. Order your copy today!
"In 'The Ashley Cooper Plan', Thomas Wilson connects Anthony Ashley Cooper (the First Earl of Shaftesbury) and John Locke's seventeenth-century vision of well-ordered society to the design of cities in the Province of Carolina to current debates about the relationship about climate change, sustainable development, urbanity, and the place of expertise in general. This important work focuses on the ways in which political culture, ideology, and governing structures have shaped political acts and public policy and illuminates one of the fundamental paradoxes of American history: although the Ashley Cooper Plan was a model of rational planning, its utopian qualities were soon undermined by the lure of profits to be had from slaveholding. Wilson argues that the "Gothic" framework of the Carolina "Fundamental Constitutions" was stripped of its original imperative of class reciprocity in the transition to slavery, which reverberates in American politics to this day"--
"Chapter 160D of the North Carolina General Statutes is the first major recodification and modernization of city and county development regulations since 1905. The endeavor was initiated by the Zoning and Land Use Section of the N.C. Bar Association in 2013 and emanated from the section's rewrite of the city and county board of adjustments statute earlier that year. This bill summary and its many footnotes are intended to help citizens and local governments understand and navigate these changes."--Page vii.
Climate change is predicted to increase the frequency and magnitude of coastal storms around the globe, and the anticipated rise of sea levels will have enormous impact on fragile and vulnerable coastal regions. In the U.S., more than 50% of the population inhabits coastal areas. In Planning for Coastal Resilience, Tim Beatley argues that, in the face of such threats, all future coastal planning and management must reflect a commitment to the concept of resilience. In this timely book, he writes that coastal resilience must become the primary design and planning principle to guide all future development and all future infrastructure decisions. Resilience, Beatley explains, is a profoundly new way of viewing coastal infrastructure—an approach that values smaller, decentralized kinds of energy, water, and transport more suited to the serious physical conditions coastal communities will likely face. Implicit in the notion is an emphasis on taking steps to build adaptive capacity, to be ready ahead of a crisis or disaster. It is anticipatory, conscious, and intentional in its outlook. After defining and explaining coastal resilience, Beatley focuses on what it means in practice. Resilience goes beyond reactive steps to prevent or handle a disaster. It takes a holistic approach to what makes a community resilient, including such factors as social capital and sense of place. Beatley provides case studies of five U.S. coastal communities, and “resilience profiles” of six North American communities, to suggest best practices and to propose guidelines for increasing resilience in threatened communities.
Traces the evolution of voting rights in the Palmetto State from the Civil War through the present.