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Exploring the experience of Muslims in America following 9/11, this
book assesses how anti-Muslim bias within the U.S. government and
the larger society undermines American security and democracy. In
the aftermath of the events of September 11, 2001, Muslims in
America have experienced discrimination and intolerance from the
U.S. government and American citizens alike. From religious and
ethnic profiling to hate crimes, intolerance against Muslims is
being reinforced on multiple levels, undercutting the Muslim
community's engagement in American society. This text is essential
for understanding how the unjust treatment of American Muslims
following September 11 has only served to alienate the Muslim
community and further divide the United States. Authored by an
expert analyst of policy for 20 years, this book explores the
prejudice against Muslims and how the actions of the U.S.
government continue to perpetuate fear and stereotypes within U.S.
citizens. The author posits that by respecting the civil rights of
Muslims, the government will lead by example in the acceptance of
American Muslims, improving homeland security along with the lives
of Muslims living in the United States. Provides a history of
Muslim experience in the United States up to September 11
Highlights legislation that discriminates against Muslims Presents
information appropriate for academic reading, professionals within
the field of homeland security and counterterrorism, and anyone
interested in the relationship between national security and civil
rights
Most of us are not old enough to remember the sinking of the
Titanic, since most of us were not even born, but almost everyone
has a vivid, mental picture of the last minutes in the life of the
huge, luxurious liner that was supposed to be unsinkable. We can
see the great ship, ablaze with lights and tilting severely by the
bow as the lifeboats were slowly moving away. We can only imagine
what it must have been like to sit in one of those small boats and
look back, or stand on the slanting deck when the realization that
the unsinkable ship was going down, must have struck even the most
faithful. The "women and children" mandate, though it was not
followed to the letter, is an integral part of the legend, and the
cause of more than one childhood nightmare, in which husbands and
fathers were forever lost beneath the icy black water. Since it
sank on April 14, 1912, the Titanic has been the subject of an
endless stress of books, pamphlets, magazine articles, films, and
even in the 1930s a country song was written by Roy Acuff, "What a
Shame, When That Gre-e-eat Ship Went Down." It has been 90 years
since the sinking of the Titanic, but the story, as told by Anna
Thomas, is as compelling and popular as any ever written.
Who wrote the Disney Fairies books? Which series appeal to boys?
In what genre would you classify "A Series of Unfortunate Events"?
These are just some of the questions that challenge K-6 librarians
as the popularity of series fiction continues to grow. Series are
not always easy to manage. Many do not have a series title and the
component volumes can be hard to identify. This updated and
expanded edition gives librarians and their patrons a handy guide
to the best and most popular series, making it easier to satisfy
young readers' desire to read all the books in a given series and
then to find similar series to enjoy.
For each of the 1,200 series included, the authors provide an
annotation that describes the series' appeal and key
characteristics. Also included are the publisher, grade level,
genre, and a numbered list of the titles in the series with
publication dates. This reading guide and selection tool is an
invaluable resource for anyone working with preschool and
elementary school children.
This book gives a unifying framework for estimating the abundance
of open populations: populations subject to births, deaths and
movement, given imperfect measurements or samples of the
populations. The focus is primarily on populations of vertebrates
for which dynamics are typically modelled within the framework of
an annual cycle, and for which stochastic variability in the
demographic processes is usually modest. Discrete-time models are
developed in which animals can be assigned to discrete states such
as age class, gender, maturity, population (within a
metapopulation), or species (for multi-species models). The book
goes well beyond estimation of abundance, allowing inference on
underlying population processes such as birth or recruitment,
survival and movement. This requires the formulation and fitting of
population dynamics models. The resulting fitted models yield both
estimates of abundance and estimates of parameters characterizing
the underlying processes.
Written for the motivated non-specialist, this fully revised and
updated edition of The Financial Crisis and Federal Reserve Policy
provides the most accurate and thorough coverage available of the
causes and consequences of the 2008 Financial Crisis, examining the
role the Federal Reserve played in preventing a major economic
meltdown on par with the Great Depression.This bestselling work has
been retooled from the ground up to include three new chapters on
post-Crisis recovery efforts, European sovereign debt, and
recently-enacted financial regulations, in addition to updated
tables and figures containing the most recent data emerging out of
the crisis. After the burst of the credit and housing bubbles in
2008, the Great Recession that followed deprived more than 8
million Americans of their jobs and triggered a per capita loss of
income of more than $6,000. Thomas provides readers with a clear
and comprehensive explanation of the myriad forces that combined to
create the bubbles that were the source of the economic
contraction. He retraces the chain reaction that took place as
these bubbles deflated, and opens a window into the channels
through which the crisis spilled over to produce a recession.
Since the breakup of AT&T in the early 1980s, many scholars and
others have argued that telecommunications regulatory policy,
especially at the state level, must change dramatically to fit new
market conditions. To others, particularly state regulators,
lawmakers, and smaller competitors, the proper response is one of
slow, incremental change in regulatory policy. This volume explores
these issues by using a unique multidisciplinary lens to focus on
the problems of market power and cost allocation in long distance
telecommunications markets. The contributors approach the subject
from the traditional perspectives of economics and law but also
incorporate developments in newer disciplines such as operations
research, decision theory, policy analysis, and corporate strategy.
Each section includes a series of main papers as well as critical
reviews by scholars using methodologies from other disciplines. The
result is an unusually comprehensive treatment of the complex
regulatory issues facing the telecommunications industry today. The
volume is divided into two primary sections which deal with market
power and cost allocation in turn. The first part opens with a
paper which examines market power from the perspective of legal
analytics. Two economists then employ the methodologies of
antitrust law and economics to survey the approaches of various
states to the problem of identifying telecommunications market
power. The third main paper in this section analyzes the market
power concept from the particular economic perspective of
contestable market theory. Turning to cost allocation issues, the
contributors argue for the applicability to long distance markets
of a new cost allocation methodology developed by NRRI for local
exchange service. The topic is then approached by using a series of
regulatory fables in which various possible incentive schemes are
used to induce supposedly efficient behavior, with cost allocation
as a resulting side issue. Each main paper is followed by one or
more critical discussant papers. Finally, contributor Alfred Kahn
draws on his long experience as a scholar and regulator to examine
the current problems of telecommunications regulation in their
historical context and to make some predictions about the future
course of regulation in the industry. An important contribution to
the business literature, this volume is a must acquisition for any
library dealing with the telecommunication industry.
To varying degrees, classic religions are associated with critique
of materialistic values. Onto this opposition of the market and the
temple other binaries have been grafted, so that 'North' and the
'West' are portrayed as secular and materialistic, 'South' and
'East' either as 'tigers' pursuing western-style affluence and
economic growth or locked into retrospective fundamentalisms. These
characterisations are called into question in a context of
diversity and global movements of peoples and goods. In this
collection this complexity is addressed in an analysis of the
interconnections between religious and consumption practices and
cultures, and the ways in which both are responding to the
ecological threat posed by continuous economic growth.
International in scope, the book combines empirical and theoretical
work in its attempt to interrogate the traditional opposition of
spiritual and materialistic values, and to explore the interplay of
religious and consuming passions in contemporary cultures. This
analysis leads to a consideration of the ways in which religions
and secular spiritualities can contribute to a new ecological
consciousness, and to the adoption of less destructive and
rapacious ways of life.
Democracy can mean a range of concepts, covering everything from
freedoms, rights, elections, governments, processes, philosophies
and a panoply of abstract and concrete notions that can be mediated
by power, positionality, culture, time and space. Democracy can
also be translated into brute force, hegemony, docility, compliance
and conformity, as in wars will be decided on the basis of the
needs of elites, or major decisions about spending finite resources
will be the domain of the few over the masses, or people will be
divided along the lines of race, ethnicity, class, religion, etc.
because it is advantageous for maintaining exploitative political
systems in place to do so. Often, these frameworks are developed
and reified based on the notion that elections give the right to
societies, or segments of societies, to install regimes,
institutions and operating systems that are then supposedly
legitimated and rendered infinitely just because formal power
resides in the hands of those dominating forces. This book is
interested in advancing a critical analysis of the hegemonic
paradigm described above, one that seeks higher levels of political
literacy and consciousness, and one that makes the connection with
education. What does education have to do with democracy? How does
education shape, influence, impinge on, impact, negate, facilitate
and/or change the context, contours and realities of democracy? How
can we teach for and about democracy to alter and transform the
essence of what democracy is, and, importantly, what it should be?
This book advances the notion of decency in relation to democracy,
and is underpinned by an analysis of meaningful, critically-engaged
education. Is it enough to be kind, nice, generous and hopeful when
we can also see signs of rampant, entrenched and debilitating
racism, sexism, poverty, violence, injustice, war and other social
inequalities? If democracy is intended to be a legitimating force
for good, how does education inform democracy? What types of
knowledge, experience, analysis and being are helpful to bring
about newer, more meaningful and socially just forms of democracy?
Throughout some twenty chapters from a range of international
scholars, this book includes three sections: Constructing Meanings
for Democracy and Decency; Justice for All as Praxis; and Social
Justice in Action for Democracy, Decency, and Diversity:
International Perspectives. The underlying thread that is
interwoven through the texts is a critical reappraisal of
normative, hegemonic interpretations of how power is infused into
the educational realm, and, importantly, how democracy can be
re-situated and re-formulated so as to more meaningfully engage
society and education.
The publications, addresses, and official documents of explorer
and scientist John Wesley Powell comprise a body of work
representing many of the great historical movements and
intellectual landscapes of 19th century America. Powell's work
yields an astonishing array of contributions to geology, geography,
anthropology and ethnography, environmental history, Native
American Studies, and natural science. Specifically, there are
important social and political issues connected to Powell--the fate
of the indigenous people of North America, the role of the federal
government in the affairs of western states, conservation of
natural resources, and historical interpretation of the settlement
of the American West.
This annotated bibliography consists of two sections. The first
is a comprehensive bibliography of Powell's writings and includes
all of Powell's monographs, including government reports, and
articles in popular magazines and scientific journals, as well as
the important published and unpublished administrative records and
correspondence, excerpts from Congressional testimony, public
addresses, and collections of archival and manuscript materials.
The second section consists of selected references for published
biographical material, articles, essays, non-print material,
Internet resources, and monographs about Powell's life and
work.
Many African American women have had experiences of being
stereotyped or judged based on the preconceived notions of service
providers. Because of the assumptions of the provider, a service or
product that is available is not accepted or accessed. This book
seeks to show through the experience of a survivor, how it feels to
be in need of a service yet unable to attain it. This book is about
being able to walk side by side with survivors of color. The goal
is to reduce the barriers faced by women of color by providing a
framework for understanding the role of culture in domestic and
sexual violence.
"Ch ree Thomas is deeply committed and passionate to end
violence against women. She is a true advocate who really gets the
human rights quality of "empowerment advocacy." "
Paula Callen, MCADSV Director of Program Services and Building
the Safety Net Project
"It is far beyond the time that women of color have our voices
heard around the service provision and understanding of our issues
regarding domestic and sexual violence. Ch ree Thomas has a clear
vision and innovative ideas for women of color leadership in this
work. I know this book will serve as a guide to those of us who
continue to advocate for women of color who have had to manage,
navigate and process the pain of being assaulted and will prove to
have solutions to how women of color can heal."
Kalimah Johnson, LMSW, LCSW
Assistant Professor
Marygrove College, Detroit
Providing a comprehensive review of pressing issues roiling
American college campuses today, this book is a valuable resource
for students and scholars alike. People often refer to America's
colleges and universities as "Ivory Towers," a term that implies
that campuses are innocent places of study largely insulated from
wider societal concerns. In actuality, our nation's universities
are hotbeds of controversy. Some of these sources of heated debate
relate directly to access to the college experience, such as the
rising cost of tuition and admission policies related to student
diversity. Others reflect wider societal schisms, such as divisions
over sexual assault (both causes and responses) and "political
correctness." Controversies on Campus: Debating the Issues
Confronting American Universities in the 21st Century examines the
myriad controversies regarding today's college campuses and student
bodies, such as tuition costs, campus rape, academic freedom/free
speech, gun policies, binge drinking, "hook-up" culture,
corporatization of academic research, poverty-level wages of
adjunct faculty, and student-athletes in the era of big-money
amateur sports. The book objectively examines these issues and
others, taking care to not only present up-to-date quantifiable
data to help readers understand the controversy but also to provide
a fair and impartial summary of perspectives on the issue in
question. It is a one-stop resource for learning about a wide range
of issues and controversies confronting American colleges and
universities and the people—students, professors, and
administrators—who comprise those communities.
Policy makers in Southern Africa are increasingly convinced that
regional trade liberalization can improve growth performance and
stimulate development throughout the region. To succeed where
previous attempts have failed, however, governments must address
two key issues. The first of these is policy coordination - the
broad range of domestic policies must be made compatible with the
proposed trade reforms. The second is institution building -
concerted attention must be devoted to strengthening weak
institutions and infrastructure. The contributors are among the
leading authorities on regional integration in Africa.
Written for the motivated non-specialist, this work provides the
most clear and thorough coverage available of the causes and
consequences of the Great Financial Crisis and the role of the
Federal Reserve in preventing it from escalating into a massive
depression a la the 1930s. The Great Recession that followed the
popping of the dual credit and housing bubbles deprived more than 8
million Americans of their jobs and triggered a per capita loss of
income of more $6,000 in 2008 and 2009 alone. This work provides a
clear and comprehensive explanation of the myriad forces that
combined to create the bubbles that were the source of the economic
contraction. It retraces the chain reaction that took place as
these bubbles deflated. The channels through which the crisis
spilled over to produce the Great Recession are carefully laid out.
The book is unique in thoroughly contrasting the Federal Reserve's
brilliant implementation of policies that saved us from disaster in
the recent crisis with its inept behavior that strongly contributed
to the Great Depression of the 1930s.
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