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On a winter morning in 1990, Senator Byron Dorgan of North Dakota
picked up the Bismarck Tribune. On the front page, a small girl
gazed into the distance, shedding a tear. The headline: 'Foster
home children beaten - and nobody's helping'. Dorgan, who had been
working with American Indian tribes to secure resources, was
distressed. He flew to the Standing Rock Indian Reservation to meet
with five-year-old Tamara and her grandfather. They became friends.
Then she disappeared. And he would search for her for decades until
they finally found each other again. This book is her story, from
childhood to the present, but it's also the story of a people and a
nation. More than one in three American Indian/Alaskan Native
children live in poverty. AI/AN children are disproportionately in
foster care and awaiting adoption. Suicide among AI/AN youth ages
15 to 24 is 2.5 times the national rate. How have we allowed this
to happen? As distressing a situation as it is, this is also a
story of hope and resilience. Dorgan, who founded the Center for
Native American Youth at the Aspen Institute, has worked tirelessly
to bring Native youth voices to the forefront of policy
discussions, engage Native youth in leadership and advocacy, and
secure and share resources for Native youth. Readers will fall in
love with this heartbreaking story, but end the book knowing what
can be done and what they can do.
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Gridlock (Paperback)
Byron L. Dorgan, David Hagberg
bundle available
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R576
R504
Discovery Miles 5 040
Save R72 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Senator Dorgan is sounding the alarm: With our country up to our
neck in trade debt--$2 billion a day--as we import energy and
export jobs, it is long past the time to tackle the trade crisis
head-on.
By outsourcing hundreds of thousands of U.S. jobs, American
companies are essentially hollowing out our economic base, and with
the current White House beholden to Big Oil and cronies straight
out of the Gilded Age, no one is guarding the rights of the
American worker. "Take This Job and Ship It" is not just a dire
warning--it also offers many sobering cures before our current
policies put American national security even further at risk.
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