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2019 Foreword INDIES Award, Gold for Anthologies "Medicine still
contains an oral tradition, passed down in stories: the stories
patients tell us, the ones we tell them, and the ones we tell
ourselves," writes contributor Madaline Harrison. Bodies of Truth
continues this tradition through a variety of narrative approaches
by writers representing all facets of health care. And, since all
of us have been or will be touched by illness or disability-our own
or that of a loved one-at some point in our lives, any reader of
this anthology can relate to the challenges, frustrations, and
pain-both physical and emotional-that the contributors have
experienced. Bodies of Truth offers perspectives on a wide array of
issues, from food allergies, cancer, and neurology to mental
health, autoimmune disorders, and therapeutic music. These
experiences are recounted by patients, nurses, doctors, parents,
children, caregivers, and others who attempt to articulate the
intangible human and emotional factors that surround life when it
intersects with the medical field.
This open access volume critically reviews a diverse body of
scholarship and practice that informs the conceptualization,
curriculum, teaching and measurement of life skills in education
settings around the world. It discusses life skills as they are
implemented in schools and non-formal education, providing both
qualitative and quantitative evidence of when, with whom, and how
life skills do or do not impact young women's and men's lives in
various contexts. Specifically, it examines the nature and
importance of life skills, and how they are taught. It looks at the
synergies and differences between life skills educational
programmes and the way in which they promote social and emotional
learning, vocational/employment education, and health and sexuality
education. Finally, it explores how life skills may be better
incorporated into education and how such education can address
structures and relations of power to help youth achieve desired
future outcomes, and goals set out in the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs). Life skills education has gained considerable
attention by education policymakers, researchers and educators as
being the sine qua non for later achievements in life. It is nearly
ubiquitous in global and national education policies, including the
SDGs, because life skills are regarded as essential for a diverse
set of purposes: reducing poverty, achieving gender equality,
promoting economic growth, addressing climate change, fostering
peace and global citizenship, and creating sustainable and healthy
communities. Yet, to achieve these broad goals, questions persist
as to which life skills are important, who needs to learn them, how
they can be taught, and how they are best measured. This book
addresses these questions.
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Ancilla (Paperback)
Erin Murphy
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R351
R290
Discovery Miles 2 900
Save R61 (17%)
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Here are insightful poems for an age that craves information and
celebrity gossip. Erin Murphy skillfully employs meter, rhyme,
line, stanza and even erasure to shine lights on minor characters
adjacent to the stars. Her instinct for narrative and formal
variation delivers fine monologues that sparkle and surprise.
Juanita was seventeen years old and pregnant with her first child
when she began an activity that would ""open"" her mind. Living in
a remote Garifuna village in Honduras, Juanita had dropped out of
school after the sixth grade. In 1996, a new educational program,
Sistema de Aprendizaje Tutorial (Tutorial Learning System or SAT),
was started in her community. The program helped her see the world
differently and open a small business. Empowering women through
education has become a top priority of international development
efforts. Erin Murphy-Graham draws on more than a decade of
qualitative research to examine the experiences of Juanita and
eighteen other women who participated in the SAT program. Their
narratives suggest the simple yet subtle ways education can spark
the empowerment process, as well as the role of men and boys in
promoting gender equality. Drawing on in-depth interviews and
classroom observation in Honduras and Uganda, Murphy-Graham shows
the potential of the SAT program to empower women through expanded
access and improved quality of secondary education in Latin America
and Africa. An appendix provides samples of the classroom lessons.
Josiah Sutton was convicted of rape. He was five inches shorter and
65 pounds lighter than the suspect described by the victim, but at
trial a lab analyst testified that his DNA was found at the crime
scene. His case looked like many others,arrest, swab, match,
conviction. But there was just one problem,Sutton was innocent.We
think of DNA forensics as an infallible science that catches the
bad guys and exonerates the innocent. But when the science goes
rogue, it can lead to a gross miscarriage of justice. Erin Murphy
exposes the dark side of forensic DNA testing: crime labs that
receive little oversight and produce inconsistent results
prosecutors who push to test smaller and poorer-quality samples,
inviting error and bias law-enforcement officers who compile
massive, unregulated, and racially skewed DNA databases and
industry lobbyists who push policies of stop and spit."DNA testing
is rightly seen as a transformative technological breakthrough, but
we should be wary of placing such a powerful weapon in the hands of
the same broken criminal justice system that has produced mass
incarceration, privileged government interests over personal
privacy, and all too often enforced the law in a biased or unjust
manner. Inside the Cell exposes the truth about forensic DNA, and
shows us what it will take to harness the power of genetic
identification in service of accuracy and fairness.
Juanita was seventeen years old and pregnant with her first child
when she began an activity that would ""open"" her mind. Living in
a remote Garifuna village in Honduras, Juanita had dropped out of
school after the sixth grade. In 1996, a new educational program,
Sistema de Aprendizaje Tutorial (Tutorial Learning System or SAT),
was started in her community. The program helped her see the world
differently and open a small business. Empowering women through
education has become a top priority of international development
efforts. Erin Murphy-Graham draws on more than a decade of
qualitative research to examine the experiences of Juanita and
eighteen other women who participated in the SAT program. Their
narratives suggest the simple yet subtle ways education can spark
the empowerment process, as well as the role of men and boys in
promoting gender equality. Drawing on in-depth interviews and
classroom observation in Honduras and Uganda, Murphy-Graham shows
the potential of the SAT program to empower women through expanded
access and improved quality of secondary education in Latin America
and Africa. An appendix provides samples of the classroom lessons.
Familial Forms is the first full-length study to examine how
literary writers engaged the politics of genealogy that helped
define the "century of revolution." By demonstrating how conflicts
over the family-state analogy intersected with the period's battles
over succession, including: the ascent of James I, the execution of
Charles I, disputes over the terms of the Interregnum government,
the Restoration of Charles II, the Exclusion Crisis, the deposition
of James II, the ascent of William and Mary, and Anne's failure to
produce a surviving heir, this study provides a new map of the
seventeenth-century politics of family in England. Beginning with a
reconsideration of Jacobean patriarchalism, Familial Forms focuses
on the work of John Milton, Lucy Hutchinson, John Dryden, and Mary
Astell. From their contrasting political and gendered positions,
these authors contemplated and contested the relevance of marriage
and kinship to government. Their writing illuminates two crucial
elements of England's conflicts. First, the formal qualities of
poems and prose tracts reveal that not only was there a competition
among different versions of the family-state analogy, but also a
competition over its very status as an analogy. Second, through
their negotiations of linear and nonlinear forms, Milton,
Hutchinson, Dryden, and Astell demonstrate the centrality of
temporality to the period's political battles. Through close
textual analysis of poetry, political tracts, parliamentary
records, and nonliterary genealogies, Familial Forms offers a fresh
understanding of the seventeenth-century politics of genealogy. It
also provides new answers to long-standing critical questions about
the poetic form of canonical works, such as Paradise Lost and
Absalom and Achitophel, and illuminates the political significance
of newly-canonical works by women writers, including Aemilia
Lanyer's Salve Deus Rex Judaeoreum, Hutchinson's Order and
Disorder, and Astell's A Serious Proposal to the Ladies. Published
by University of Delaware Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers
University Press.
Contemporary poets offer behind-the-scenes perspectives on the
poetic process.
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