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This book explores ways in which education supports or negates the
wellbeing and rights of young people in or from the Americas. It
shows how young people diagnose problems and propose important new
directions for education. A collective chronicle from researchers
working alongside young people in Chile, Dominican Republic,
Guatemala, Honduras, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, and the
Caribbean and Latin American diaspora in Canada, the authors
embrace the work in terms of justice: intergenerational, racial,
cultural and ecological with/by/for various groups of young people.
This book delves into the wide gap between the expressed rights of
young people in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the
Child and the ways in which education operates. In so doing, it
examines the entrenched colonial legacies which persist, including
systemic racism, flabby curriculum, hyper-surveillance and broken
promises for care and human relationships needed to support youth.
The resourceful young people shown here - who identify as Latin
American, Black, Indigenous and/or diasporic - are diagnosing and
negotiating these injustices in revolutionary moves for education.
Teachers, parents, communities and youth themselves could learn
from these critical, transformative and anticolonial youthful
pedagogies for being with education. This book will appeal to
scholars, students, policymakers and practitioners in the areas of
youth studies, education, social justice, sociology, human rights,
wellbeing and social work.
This absorbing account of the life and work of Clara Collet, a
leading economist, statistician and champion of women's employment,
is the first biography of this remarkable woman and reveals through
Collet's diaries her fascinating personal life. An early female
university graduate (1880), then teacher, she campaigned for the
secondary education provision of girls at a time when it was
negligible. Her other major contribution was in raising the status
of working-class women, becoming a Commissioner for the Royal
Commission on Labour (1892). She was close to the family of Karl
Marx, particularly with Eleanor Marx, and with Beatrice Webb. Her
enduring friendship with the cult Victorian author George Gissing
deeply influenced his writing. Her working relationships with
Charles Booth, Lloyd George, Ramsay MacDonald and Winston Churchill
are also celebrated
Of the many attempts to discover Jack the Ripper's identity, few
omit the name of James Kenneth Stephen, tutor to Queen Victoria's
eldest grandson, fondly known as Prince Eddy. While Stephen
superficially fit the profile investigators established, was he
really capable of the demented violence perpetrated by England's
most famous serial killer? This volume takes an in-depth look at
the life and experiences of James Kenneth Stephen, examining the
relevant evidence and attempting to determine whether or not
Stephen could actually have been involved in the Ripper murders.
Delving into what little is known of Stephen's early years, the
work discusses his relationship with his mother and his father's
struggle with a hereditary mental illness. It follows him through
his formative years at Eton, which he considered his true home and
where he was introduced to the Greek notion of homosexuality. The
work's primary focus is Stephen's relationship with Prince Eddy,
who also became a suspect in the infamous London murders. The way
in which Stephen's life intertwined with those of Prince Eddy and
Montague Druitt, another Ripper suspect, is examined in detail.
Other incidents of the fateful fall of 1888 and Stephen's final
surrender to mental illness are also discussed. Appendices contain
Stephen's poetry and details regarding his family ancestry.
Moura Budberg: spy, adventurer, charismatic seductress and mistress
of two of the century's greatest writers, the Russian aristocrat
Baroness Moura Budberg was born in 1892 to indulgence, pleasure and
selfishness. But after she met the British diplomat and secret
agent Robert Bruce Lockhart, she sacrificed everything for love,
only to be betrayed. When Lockhart arrived in Revolutionary Russia
in 1918, his official mission was Britain's envoy to the new
Bolshevik government, yet his real assignment was to create a
network of agents and plot the downfall of Lenin. Lockhart soon got
to know Moura and they began a passionate affair, even though Moura
was spying on him for the Bolsheviks. But when Lockhart's plot
unravelled, she would forsake everything in an attempt to protect
him from Lenin's secret police. Fleeing to a life of exile in
England and taking a string of new lovers, including Maxim Gorky
and H. G. Wells, Moura later spied for Stalin and for Britain
amidst the web of scandal surrounding the Cambridge spies. Through
all this she clung to the hope that Lockhart would finally return
to her. Grippingly narrated, this is the first biography of Moura
Budberg to use the full range of previously unexamined letters,
diaries and documents. An incredible true story of passion,
espionage and double crossing that encircled the globe, A Very
Dangerous Woman brings her extraordinary world vividly to life with
dramatic resonances to rival the most sensational novel.
This edited collection presents stories of children and young
people's entanglements with times of ongoing crisis in the
Anthropocene. The authors use biographical narratives and
arts-based methodologies to further the discussion surrounding
young people's well-being, resilience, and enterprise. Through
these stories, they seek to critically engage with the literature
on the Anthropocene and interrogate concepts such as agency,
structure, and belonging.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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