Results 211 to 220 of about 3,312 (263)

Decolonial Thinking and Refugees’ Stories

2021
As an important stimulus for the international mushrooming of artistic creativity in public spaces, counter narratives by displaced people are contributing to the reframing of the political and sociolinguistic contemporary framework, where migrant identities are fighting to gain a voice.
Carbonara, Lorena, Rizzo, Alessandra
openaire   +1 more source

Refugees: A Never-Ending Story

Foreign Affairs, 1985
The current refugee situation around the world is reviewed. The author estimates the current global total at about 10 million refugees the majority of whom are in developing countries. The increasing demand of many refugees to come to developed countries is noted. (ANNOTATION)
openaire   +2 more sources

Refugee Girlhood and Visual Storied Curriculum

2021
Decolonizing girlhood illuminates an attempt to refuse and recover the pathological representation of Indigenous refugee girls by going beyond the discourse of the Western construction of girlhood. It takes an anticolonial, critical race feminist approach to the understanding of girlhood that challenges the intersectional, racialized exclusion and the ...
openaire   +1 more source

Syria to Sweden: Refugee Stories

Anthropology Now, 2016
I had a choice between imprisonment, torture and eventually death or to leave Syria. I chose the latter, but it was a very hard decision because my family could not leave with me, and neither could...
openaire   +1 more source

The Last Decade's Refugee Story

2002
Abstract In the 1990s, new conflicts broke out, particularly in connection with the dissolution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, as well as several places in Africa. Initiatives were invented and re‐invented, and policy responses reverted to a largely reactive mode.
openaire   +1 more source

Using Refugee Stories in Social Work Education

Journal of Multicultural Social Work, 1997
ABSTRACT Facilitating the adjustment of refugees can be a challenging task for social workers because these involuntary migrants are often both culturally different and psychologically traumatized. Powerful stories about the refugee experience can, therefore, be valuable tools in the preparation of social workers.
Margaret Beattie, Janet Randell
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy