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In the late 1950s, Communists decided that Zanzibar offered them
a particular favorable opportunity for expanding their
influence.
Hunter provides a glimpse inside North Korean society, detailing
the everyday life of people living in perhaps the most isolated,
secretive society of the 20th century. In this declassified CIA
study, she describes the world's most extreme cult society under
the charismatic totalitarian leader, Kim Il-song, who ruled his
people for 45 years--longer than any other leader of the 20th
century.
Kim Il-song's totalitarian cult society comes closest to George
Orwell's "1984" than any society yet contrived. Hunter brings to
life what it is like to live in a thoroughly thought-controlled
society--which also is the world's most class-conscious society.
Based on all the sources available to the CIA at the time, this
book is the most comprehensive look at North Korean life ever
published. It is essential reading for foreign policy officials,
Asian Studies scholars, and the general public interested in world
affairs.
This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. This book
investigates what international placements of healthcare employees
in low resource settings add to the UK workforce and the efficacy
of its national health system. The authors present empirical data
collected from a volunteer deployment project in Uganda focused on
reducing maternal and new-born mortality and discuss the learning
and experiential outcomes for UK health care professionals acting
as long term volunteers in low resource settings. They also develop
a model for structured placement that offers optimal learning and
experiential outcomes and minimizes risk, while shedding new light
on the role that international placements play as part of
continuing professional development both in the UK and in other
sending countries.
This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. This book
examines the current state of elective placements of medical
undergraduate students in developing countries and their impact on
health care education at home. Drawing from a recent case study of
volunteer deployment in Uganda, the authors provide an in-depth
evaluation of the impacts on the students themselves and the
learning outcomes associated with placements in low resource
settings, as well as the impacts that these forms of student
mobility have on the host settings. In addition to reviewing the
existing literature on elective placements, the authors outline a
potential model for the future development of ethical elective
placements. As the book concurs with an increasing international
demand for elective placements, it will be of immediate interest to
universities, intermediary organizations, students as consumers,
and hosting organisations in low-resource settings.
On September 30, 1965, six of Indonesia's highest ranking generals
were killed in an effort by President Sukarno to crush an alleged
coup. The events of that were part of a rapidly growing power
struggle pro and anti-Communist factions. The elimination of the
generals, however, did little to increase and preserve Sukarno's
power, though, and he was stripped of the presidency in 1967.
Hunt's work is a unique and original examination of the events that
culminated on that night in September, 1965. It is the first
detailed account of the Indonesian Coup that reveals the previously
unknown workings of the PKI's ultra-secret Special Bureau, a
clandestine organization within the Communist Party that may be the
prototype of other similar entities that flourished around the
world in the mid-50's and 60s. No such expose of secret communist
organizations committed to covert killings of the top military or
political leaders of the country has ever been published. She
establishes beyond any doubt that the PKI, under Chairman Aidit's
direction, using the capabilities of a secret organization within
the PKI that only Aidit and a handful of trusted high-level members
of the Communist Party even knew about, and, most importantly,
acting with President Sukarno's full knowledge and approval,
planned and then-dramatically-failed to execute a bold plan to kill
the top leadership of the Army and proclaim a new socialist state
under President Sukarno's leadership with PKI Chairman Aidit as his
proclaimed successor. At the time of the coup, government analysts
as well as non-government scholars were of two minds. Some, like
the group at Cornell University, were convinced that the PKI
(Indonesian CommunistParty) had not been involved, that the coup
was the action mid-level army officers against the top leadership.
That was the official line at the time. Others were convinced that
the PKI alone had planned and executed the coup in its long-held
desire to remove the pro-U.S. army leadership. No one at the time
saw the hand of Indonesia's world-famous President Sukarno in the
affair.
This book is open access under a CC BY license. This book explores
the impact that professional volunteers have on the low resource
countries they choose to spend time in. Whilst individual
volunteering may be of immediate benefit to individual patients,
this intervention may have detrimental effects on local health
systems; distorting labour markets, accentuating dependencies and
creating opportunities for corruption. Improved volunteer
deployment may avoid these risks and present opportunities for
sustainable systems change. The empirical research presented in
this book stems from a specific volunteering intervention funded by
the Tropical Health Education Trust and focused on improving
maternal and newborn health in Uganda. However, important
opportunities exist for policy transfer to other contexts.
This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. This book
investigates what international placements of healthcare employees
in low resource settings add to the UK workforce and the efficacy
of its national health system. The authors present empirical data
collected from a volunteer deployment project in Uganda focused on
reducing maternal and new-born mortality and discuss the learning
and experiential outcomes for UK health care professionals acting
as long term volunteers in low resource settings. They also develop
a model for structured placement that offers optimal learning and
experiential outcomes and minimizes risk, while shedding new light
on the role that international placements play as part of
continuing professional development both in the UK and in other
sending countries.
This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. This book
examines the current state of elective placements of medical
undergraduate students in developing countries and their impact on
health care education at home. Drawing from a recent case study of
volunteer deployment in Uganda, the authors provide an in-depth
evaluation of the impacts on the students themselves and the
learning outcomes associated with placements in low resource
settings, as well as the impacts that these forms of student
mobility have on the host settings. In addition to reviewing the
existing literature on elective placements, the authors outline a
potential model for the future development of ethical elective
placements. As the book concurs with an increasing international
demand for elective placements, it will be of immediate interest to
universities, intermediary organizations, students as consumers,
and hosting organisations in low-resource settings.
Animal products were used extensively in nineteenth-century
Britain. A middle-class Victorian woman might wear a dress made of
alpaca wool, drape herself in a sealskin jacket, brush her hair
with a tortoiseshell comb, and sport feathers in her hat. She might
entertain her friends by playing a piano with ivory keys or own a
parrot or monkey as a living fashion accessory. In this innovative
study, Helen Cowie examines the role of these animal-based
commodities in Britain in the long nineteenth century and traces
their rise and fall in popularity in response to changing tastes,
availability, and ethical concerns. Focusing on six popular animal
products - feathers, sealskin, ivory, alpaca wool, perfumes, and
exotic pets - she considers how animal commodities were sourced and
processed, how they were marketed and how they were consumed. She
also assesses the ecological impact of nineteenth-century fashion.
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