How to Work in Someone Else s Country

How to Work in Someone Else s Country
Author: Ruth Stark
Publsiher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 9780295804323

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Working abroad offers adventure, friendship with people of other cultures, intimate familiarity with exciting places, and opportunities to make real differences in communities. It also presents countless challenges, ranging from packing and staying safe and healthy to balancing project objectives with on-the-ground realities, working with local officials, and forging respectful and productive relationships. These challenges and many more are tackled in How to Work in Someone Else's Country. Drawing on thirty years of experience as an international consultant in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Pacific, Ruth Stark provides guidance for anybody preparing to work in a foreign country. This easy-to-read guide is enlivened by real-life examples drawn from the author's journals and stories shared by colleagues. Slim enough to fit in a carry-on, this book is sure to come in handy wherever your work takes you.

The Return of the Public

The Return of the Public
Author: Dan Hind
Publsiher: Verso Books
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2012-05-22
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781844679102

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Under the incurious gaze of the major media, the political establishment and the financial sector have become increasingly deceitful and dangerous in recent years. At the same time, journalists at Rupert Murdoch’s News International and elsewhere have been breaking the law on an industrial scale. Now we are expected to stay quiet while those who presided over the shambles judge their own conduct. In The Return of the Public, Dan Hind argues for reform of the media as a necessary prelude to wider social transformation. A former commissioning editor, Hind urges us to focus on the powers of the media to instigate investigations and to publicize the results, powers that editors and owners are desperate to keep from general deliberation. Hind describes a programme of reform that is modest, simple and informed by years of experience. It is a programme that much of the media cannot bring themselves even to acknowledge, precisely because it threatens their private power. It is time the public had their say.

Who Needs the Past

Who Needs the Past
Author: R. Layton
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2012-11-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781135090630

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This book offers a critique of the all pervasive Western notion that other communities often live in a timeless present. Who Needs the Past? provides first-hand evidence of the interest non-Western, non-academic communities have in the past.

In Someone Else s Country

In Someone Else s Country
Author: Trenita Brookshire Childers
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 195
Release: 2020-08-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781538131022

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In this groundbreaking work, Trenita Childers explores the enduring system of racial profiling in the Dominican Republic, where Dominicans of Haitian descent are denied full citizenship in the only country they have ever known. As birthright citizens, they now wonder why they are treated like they are “in someone else’s country.” Childers describes how nations like the Dominican Republic create “stateless” second-class citizens through targeted documentation policies. She also carefully discusses the critical gaps between policy and practice while excavating the complex connections between racism and labor systems. Her vivid ethnography profiles dozens of Haitian immigrants and Dominicans of Haitian descent and connects their compelling individual experiences with broader global and contemporary discussions about race, immigration, citizenship, and statelessness while highlighting examples of collective resistance.

Multilingualism in the Chinese Diaspora Worldwide

Multilingualism in the Chinese Diaspora Worldwide
Author: Li Wei
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2015-10-16
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781317638971

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In this volume, Li Wei brings together contributions from well-known and emerging scholars in socio- and anthropological linguistics working on different linguistic and communicative aspects of the Chinese diaspora. The project examines the Chinese diasporic experience from a global, comparative perspective, with a particular focus on transnational links, and local social and multilingual realities. Contributors address the emergence of new forms of Chinese in multilingual contexts, family language policy and practice, language socialization and identity development, multilingual creativity, linguistic attitudes and ideologies, and heritage language maintenance, loss, learning and re-learning. The studies are based on empirical observations and investigations in Chinese communities across the globe, including well-researched (from a sociolinguistic perspective) areas such as North America, Western Europe and Australia, as well as under-explored and under-represented areas such as Africa, Latin America, Central Asia, and the Middle East; the volume also includes detailed ethnographic accounts representing regions with a high concentration of Chinese migration such as Southeast Asia. This volume not only will allow sociolinguists to investigate the link between linguistic phenomena in specific communities and wider socio-cultural processes, but also invites an open dialogue with researchers from other disciplines who are working on migration, diaspora and identity, and those studying other language-based diasporic communities such as the Russian diaspora, the Spanish diaspora, the Portuguese diaspora, and the Arabic diaspora.

Soldier Box

Soldier Box
Author: Joe Glenton
Publsiher: Verso Books
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2013-06-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781781683347

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"I looked around my cell and saw the sheet of paper taped to the door at chest height. It listed everything in the room, chair, bed, soldier box … For a moment I thought it meant the cell itself; a box to put soldiers in." When the War on Terror began, Briton Joe Glenton felt compelled to serve his nation. He passed through basic training and deployed to Afghanistan in 2006. What he saw overseas left him disillusioned, and he returned home increasingly political and manifesting symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. When he refused to return for a second tour, he was denied his right to object and called “a coward and a malingerer.” He went absent without leave and left the country, returning later to the UK voluntarily to campaign against the wars. The military accused him of desertion and threatened years in prison. Soldier Box tells the story of Glenton’s extraordinary journey from a promising soldier to a rebel against what he came to see as unjustified military action.

Odd Fables and Other Poems

Odd Fables and Other Poems
Author: Ephriam Sando
Publsiher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2012-02-13
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9781469151915

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Helicoptering and Other Annoying Habits of the Gen X Parent

 Helicoptering  and Other Annoying Habits of the Gen X Parent
Author: B.J. Bradley
Publsiher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2024
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9780578048192

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