Neighbours and Strangers

Neighbours and Strangers
Author: Bernhard Zeller,Charles West,Francesca Tinti,Nicolas Schroeder,Marco Stoffella,Miriam Czock,Carine van Rhijn
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2020-03-27
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 1526139812

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This book explores rural societies in western Europe from 700-1050. It focuses on the bottom of the social hierarchy, rejectingviews that see rural society exclusively through the structures of lordship and challenging the teleological idea of the residential group as the prototype of the late-medieval structured community.

Strangers to Neighbours

Strangers to Neighbours
Author: Shauna Labman,Geoffrey Cameron
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 135
Release: 2020-09-23
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780228002758

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As a leading country in global refugee resettlement, Canada operates a unique program that allows private groups and individuals to sponsor refugees. This innovative approach has received growing international attention, but there remains a need for a more expansive understanding of the sponsorship framework and its potential implications within Canada and across the world. Strangers to Neighbours explains the origins and development of refugee sponsorship, paying particular attention to the unintended consequences and ethical dilemmas it produces for refugee policy. The contributors to this collection draw upon law, social science, and philosophy to bring a more robust and objective perspective on Canada's historical experience with sponsorship into wider conversations about the refugee crisis and resettlement. Together, they present recent cases that exemplify how the model has been applied and how it functions, while also analyzing the challenges that emerge in host-sponsor relations. This volume further examines how sponsorship has been implemented differently in countries such as the United States and Australia. The first dedicated study of refugee sponsorship policy, Strangers to Neighbours assembles leading scholars from a range of disciplines to consider whether Canada's system is indeed a sustainable model for the world.

Where Strangers Become Neighbours

Where Strangers Become Neighbours
Author: Leonie Sandercock,Giovanni Attili
Publsiher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2008-12-10
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781402090356

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In the present age of migration, the influx of immigrants from distant lands leads inevitably to the spatial and social restructuring of cities and regions. It is often accompanied by fears of and hostility towards the newcomers. Nevertheless, in Europe, North America and Japan this influx of immigrants is essential to economic growth. How can immigrants become accepted members of the society of their adopted country? How can strangers become neighbours? What alchemies of political and social imagination are required to achieve peaceful coexistence in the mongrel cities of the 21st century? What philosophies and policies have made integration successful in Canada and how can it be translated into European context? The book tackles an important contemporary issue – the social integration of immigrants in a large metropolis – by way of the detailed case study of one Canadian city. The book provides a large political and legal context which makes this case study comprehensible and inspiring to readers outside Canada.

Strangers and Neighbors

Strangers and Neighbors
Author: Maria Poggi Johnson
Publsiher: Thomas Nelson
Total Pages: 161
Release: 2006-11-05
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781418571818

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The compelling, insightful, and challenging memoir of a Christian woman's exploration of her faith while living in community with strictly Orthodox Jews. As Maria Johnson explains: "I knew that Christianity is rooted deep in Judaism, but living in daily contact with a vital and vibrant Jewish life has been fascinating and transforming. I am and will remain a Christian, but I am a rather different Christian than I was before."

Neighbours and Strangers

Neighbours and Strangers
Author: Donald F. Miller
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 192
Release: 1999
Genre: City and town life
ISBN: UOM:39015052771725

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Case study of New Delhi, India.

My Vertical Neighborhood

My Vertical Neighborhood
Author: Lynda MacGibbon
Publsiher: InterVarsity Press
Total Pages: 161
Release: 2021-03-30
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780830847921

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Top World Guild Awards Best Nonfiction Book of the Year What if our neighbors were our friends? When Lynda MacGibbon moved from a small city in eastern Canada to a high-rise apartment in Toronto, she decided to follow Jesus' famous commandment to "love your neighbor" a bit more literally. In the past, she would have looked first for friends at her new job or her new church. This time, though, she decided to look for friends among the strangers who shared her apartment building—her actual neighbors in her new "vertical neighborhood." In this charming and relatable memoir, MacGibbon tells the story of the community that took shape as neighbors said yes to weekly dinners and a writing group, Christmas morning brunch and even a Bible study. It's a story of the simple, everyday risk of reaching out with love to those around us, and of the beauty and messiness of real human relationships. It's a story of the risks—and rewards—of taking Jesus at his word.

Cities of Strangers

Cities of Strangers
Author: Miri Rubin
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 207
Release: 2020-03-19
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781108481236

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Explores how medieval towns and cities received newcomers, and the process by which these 'strangers' became 'neighbours' between 1000 and 1500.

Strangers and Neighbours

Strangers and Neighbours
Author: Jeremy Hayhoe
Publsiher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2016-02-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781442623903

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Though historians have come to acknowledge the mobility of rural populations in early modern Europe, few books demonstrate the intensity and importance of short-distance migrations as definitively as Strangers and Neighbours. Marshalling an incredible range of evidence that includes judicial records, tax records, parish registers, and the census of 1796, Jeremy Hayhoe reconstructs the migration profiles of more than 70,000 individuals from eighteenth-century northern Burgundy. In this book, Hayhoe paints a picture of a surprisingly mobile and dynamic rural population. More than three quarters of villagers would move at least once in their lifetime; most of those who moved would do so more than once, in many cases staying only briefly in each community. Combining statistical analysis with an extensive discussion of witness depositions, he brings the experiences and motivations of these many migrants to life, creating a virtuoso reconceptualization of the rural demography of the ancien régime.