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Little Ethiopia of the Pacific Northwest tells the story of the
Ethiopian community in Seattle. The community began with
approximately two dozen college students who came to the city
during the Ethiopian revolution of 1974. These sojourning students
earned college and university degrees, but were unable to return
home to use them to modernize the developing nation. These stranded
students became pioneers who built a micro-community in inner-city
Seattle. Providing background with an analysis of Seattle's
geographic, demographic, social, and economic challenges, this
volume studies the students who became asylum seekers; their falls
in position, power, prestige; and the income of these elite and
non-elite settlers. The authors analyze examples of those who
became entrepreneurs and the ingenuity and determination they
employed to start successful businesses. The authors examine the
challenges imposed on them by a school system that assigned their
children to grade levels according to age rather than knowledge.
They explore how the American welfare system worked in practice and
explain how and why Ethiopians die young in Seattle. This
fascinating study will be of interest to sociologists,
ethnographers, and regional analysts.
Little Ethiopia of the Pacific Northwest tells the story of the
Ethiopian community in Seattle. The community began with
approximately two dozen college students who came to the city
during the Ethiopian revolution of 1974. These sojourning students
earned college and university degrees, but were unable to return
home to use them to modernize the developing nation. These stranded
students became pioneers who built a micro-community in inner-city
Seattle.
Providing background with an analysis of Seattle's geographic,
demographic, social, and economic challenges, this volume studies
the students who became asylum seekers; their falls in position,
power, prestige; and the income of these elite and non-elite
settlers. The authors analyze examples of those who became
entrepreneurs and the ingenuity and determination they employed to
start successful businesses.
The authors examine the challenges imposed on them by a school
system that assigned their children to grade levels according to
age rather than knowledge. They explore how the American welfare
system worked in practice and explain how and why Ethiopians die
young in Seattle. This fascinating study will be of interest to
sociologists, ethnographers, and regional analysts.
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