|
Showing 1 - 25 of
120 matches in All Departments
Abriendo Puertas, Cerrando Heridas (Opening Doors, Closing Wounds):
Latinas/os Finding Work-Life Balance in Academia is the newest book
in the series on balancing work and life in the academy from
Information Age Publishing. This volume focuses on the experiences
of Latina/o students, professors, and staff/administrators in
higher education and documents their testimonios of achieving a
sense of balance between their personal and professional lives. In
the face of many challenges they are scattered across the country,
are often working in isolation of each other and must find ways to
develop their own networks, support structures, and spaces where
they can share their wisdom, strategize, and forge alliances to
ensure collective. The book focuses on Latinas/os in colleges of
education, since many of them carry the important mission to
prepare new teachers, and research new pedagogies that have the
power of improving and transforming education. Following the format
of the work-life balance book series, this volume contains
autoethnographical testimonios in its methodological approach. This
volume addresses three very important guiding questions (1) What
are the existing structures that isolate/discriminate against
Latinas/os in higher education? (2) How can Latinas/os disrupt
these to achieve work-life balance? And, (3) Based on their
experiences, what are the transformative ideologies regarding
Latinas/os seeking work-life balance?
This book can be seen as two different books. The first is a
history of political parties in ten nations (with the sections on
France and Germany limited to specific periods). The second is an
inquiry into the reasons for the different party systems that are
found when applying similar proportional rules. In the specific
countries that are analyzed, the authors put to the forefront
community ties (specifically labor unions, some religious
organizations and at times language) that intervene in the apparent
political affiliation of a considerable number of voters. In
addition, the authors add an explanation of the rise of new parties
that hinges largely on whether or not alternatives exist that have
not been tainted by having been part of the government or having
been closely part of failed political institutions.
Can one envision economic growth that is also sustainable because
it takes into account the cultural, moral and religious values of
those intended to benefit from economic development? To explore
this question, the Woodstock Theological Center launched a
collaborative research effort involving 40 Jesuit centers around
the world, taking as its "raw material" the stories of specific,
mostly poor, individuals and their communities as they were touched
by economic globalization. Focusing on decisions made by the
individuals as they encountered the forces of the global economy,
the authors discern the values and creativity that guided these
decisions and derive implications for development policy. The
book's methodology draws on the Jesuit approach to discernment that
stresses the ethical responsibility of all development actors. It
envisions communities partnering with other development agents,
such as government, business, and NGO's, based on a better
understanding of the values that drive decisions.
A focus throughout on lifespan perspectives and a consideration of
palliative care across all ages. Consideration of different
cultural perspectives, beliefs, thoughts and practices outside
Western societies and dominant paradigms. Integrates primary
research throughout, including a focus on contemporary research
from social media. Complements mainstream psychological approaches
to life-limiting illness by exploring death, dying and palliative
care with a critical health psychology lens.
The authors provide an intimate knowledge of the fundamentals
required to cope with the everchanging nature of the money and
foreign exchange markets. Its emphasis is on the management of down
to earth operations, covering how to read and take advantage of
market quotations, the funds manager and the interaction between
money and foreign exchange markets, funds management in a two-way
market, problems and solutions in the trading room of a bank,
problems and solutions of the multinational non-financial business,
returns and risks, in foreign exchange operations, and control of
foreign exchange and money market operations. This new edition is
updated to account for recent changes and expanded to emphasize and
broaden the treatment of money markets.
This book advances a broad constellation of critical concepts
situated within the field of queer studies and education.
Collectively, the concepts take up a cross-section of scholarship
that speaks to various political, epistemological, theoretical,
methodological, and pedagogical concerns. Given the ongoing global
centrality of sociocultural and political developments related to
the topic of LGBTQ in the twenty-first century, the concepts in
this volume and the issues raised by each contributor will have
wide international appeal among researchers, scholars, educators,
students, and activists working at the intersection of queer
studies and education.
A focus throughout on lifespan perspectives and a consideration of
palliative care across all ages. Consideration of different
cultural perspectives, beliefs, thoughts and practices outside
Western societies and dominant paradigms. Integrates primary
research throughout, including a focus on contemporary research
from social media. Complements mainstream psychological approaches
to life-limiting illness by exploring death, dying and palliative
care with a critical health psychology lens.
The LGBTQ+ Muslim Experience presents an accessible, applied
discussion of transformative and intersectional approaches to
LGBTQ+ Muslim research, training and clinical practice. The book
asserts that LGBTQ+ Muslims can agentively build resilience
pathways as they negotiate multiple minority identities and
stressors. Through consciously recognizing the power-laden contexts
of both conflict and development, scholars and clinicians can
partner with multiple minority populations such as LGBTQ+ Muslims
as they pursue social justice and enact their own transformative
development. To this end, this book aims to address four goals: (1)
to amplify the voices of both sexual and gender minority Muslims;
(2) to acknowledge the intersectional challenges and stressors that
LGBTQ+ Muslims encounter as a multiple minority group; (3) to
highlight LGBTQ+ Muslims' relational and cultural resilience tools
and (4) to introduce transformative intersectional psychology
frameworks for future research and clinical practice with sexual
and gender minority people of faith. The chapters in this book were
originally published as a special issue of the Journal of
Homosexuality.
This book invites readers to explore the critical interruptions
occasioned by queer pedagogies. Building on earlier scholarly work
in this area, as well as pedagogical production arising out of
queer activism, the chapters in this volume examine a broad range
of themes as they collectively grapple with the meaning and
practice of queer pedagogy across different contexts. In this way,
Queer Pedagogies provides a glance at new ways of thinking about
and acting on contemporary educational topics and debates situated
at the intersection of queer studies and education. In taking up
the concept of queer pedagogy, the volume provides ample
opportunities for scholars, educators, activists, and other
cultural workers to critically engage with ongoing questions of
theory, praxis, and politics.
By critically examining the legal, institutional, and social
factors that prohibit or promote students' college choices, this
Volume undermines the notion that African American students and
their families are opposed to formal education, and reveals
structural barriers which they face in accessing elite
institutions. For African American students, unequal education is
rooted in the history in the legacy of slavery and of the history
of institutional and structural racism in United States. The long
legacy of racism in education cannot be dismissed when reflecting
on the college choice experiences of African American students made
today. Authors uniquely apply Critical Race Theory (CRT) to analyse
the college selection process of high achieving African American
students and, highlight the similarities and differences within an
impressive group of students, therefore challenging the deficit
notions of African American students as perpetual under-achievers.
They also show that contrary to the general assumption, African
American parents are inclined towards providing their sons and
daughters higher education at the elite institutes of US. The
decision is often influenced by analysis of factors including the
allocation of school resources, parental attitudes, university
recruitment, campus outreach, and affordability. The issues of
discrimination on the grounds of race, class, and gender often
plays a vital role in decision making process. This text will be of
great interest to graduate and postgraduate students, researchers,
academics, professionals and policy makers in the field of Race
& Ethnicity in Higher Education, Sociology of Education,
Equality & Human Rights, and African American Studies.
The memoirs in this collection represent a cross-section of
critical reflections by a queerly diverse set of individuals on
their experiences inhabiting a variety of spaces within the field
of education. In their stories, the authors share how they queered
and are continuing to queer the academy in relation to questions of
teaching, research, policy, and/or administration. Their memoirs
speak across generations of queer educators and scholars;
collectively their work highlights an array of theoretical
perspectives and methodological approaches. As snapshots in time,
the memoirs can be taken up as archive and studied in order to gain
perspective on the issues facing queers in the academy across
various intersections of identities related to ethnicity, culture,
language, (a)gender, (a)sexuality, (dis)ability, socio-economic
status, religion, age, veteran status, health status, and more. By
way of the memoirs in this volume, a richer body of queer knowledge
is offered that can be pulled from and infused into the academic
and personal contexts of the work of educators queering academia.
By critically examining the legal, institutional, and social
factors that prohibit or promote students' college choices, this
Volume undermines the notion that African American students and
their families are opposed to formal education, and reveals
structural barriers which they face in accessing elite
institutions. For African American students, unequal education is
rooted in the history in the legacy of slavery and of the history
of institutional and structural racism in United States. The long
legacy of racism in education cannot be dismissed when reflecting
on the college choice experiences of African American students made
today. Authors uniquely apply Critical Race Theory (CRT) to analyse
the college selection process of high achieving African American
students and, highlight the similarities and differences within an
impressive group of students, therefore challenging the deficit
notions of African American students as perpetual under-achievers.
They also show that contrary to the general assumption, African
American parents are inclined towards providing their sons and
daughters higher education at the elite institutes of US. The
decision is often influenced by analysis of factors including the
allocation of school resources, parental attitudes, university
recruitment, campus outreach, and affordability. The issues of
discrimination on the grounds of race, class, and gender often
plays a vital role in decision making process. This text will be of
great interest to graduate and postgraduate students, researchers,
academics, professionals and policy makers in the field of Race
& Ethnicity in Higher Education, Sociology of Education,
Equality & Human Rights, and African American Studies.
This unique collection examines the social justice implications
of contemporary economic, finance, and budgeting policies affecting
the K-12 education system in the United States. The authors
included in this volume provide critiques and explorations of
several established theories and policy approaches that undergird
contemporary thinking in the field of school finance. These
explorations offer themselves as foundations for building new
frameworks to understand how school finance policies might better
support broader changes needed to improve the educational
conditions faced by those individuals and groups traditionally
underrepresented in economic, political, and social policy
arenas.
This unique collection examines the social justice implications
of contemporary economic, finance, and budgeting policies affecting
the K-12 education system in the United States. The authors
included in this volume provide critiques and explorations of
several established theories and policy approaches that undergird
contemporary thinking in the field of school finance. These
explorations offer themselves as foundations for building new
frameworks to understand how school finance policies might better
support broader changes needed to improve the educational
conditions faced by those individuals and groups traditionally
underrepresented in economic, political, and social policy
arenas.
Much of the focus of anti-homophobic/anti-heterosexist educational
theory, curriculum, and pedagogy has examined the impact of
homophobia and heterosexism on gay, lesbian, bisexual, and
transgender (GLBT) students and teachers. Such a focus has provided
numerous theoretical and pedagogical insights, and has informed
important changes in educational policy. Queering Straight
Teachers: Discourse and Identity in Education remains deeply
committed to the social justice project of improving the lives of
GLBT students and teachers. However, in contrast with much of the
previous scholarship, Queering Straight Teachers shifts the focus
from an analysis of the GLBT «Other to a critical examination of
what it might mean, in theory and in practice, to queer straight
teachers, and the implications this has for challenging
institutionalized heteronormativity in education. This book will be
useful in courses on educational foundations, curriculum studies,
multicultural education, queer theory, gay and lesbian studies, and
critical theory.
This book examines, within the context and concerns of education,
Foucault's reflections on friendship in his 1981 interview
"Friendship as a Way of Life." In the interview, Foucault advances
the notion of a homosexual ascesis based on experimental
friendships, proposing that homosexuality can provide the
conditions for inventing new relational forms that can engender a
homosexual culture and ethics, "a way of life," not resembling
institutionalized codes for relating. The contributors to this
volume draw from Foucault's reflections on ascesis and friendship
in order to consider a range of topics and issues related to
critical studies of sexualities and genders in education.
Collectively, the chapters open a dialogue for researchers,
scholars, and educators interested in exploring the importance and
relevance of Foucault's reflections on friendship for studies of
schooling and education.
This textbook provides an engaging guide to psychosocial theories
of child and adolescents' wellbeing, demonstrating how psychology
and sociology can be used to address key contemporary issues for
those working with children and adolescents. It begins with an
examination of the socially constructed nature of 'childhood' and
'adolescence', and impact of cultural context on the conditions for
'well-being', before outlining core psychological and sociological
theories of childhood and adolescence. It adopts a psychosocial
approach to illustrate the influence of social context on
biologically based development in relation to topics including
attachment, learning, play, parenting, family life, deviance,
medicalisation, long-term conditions, vulnerability, and
resilience. Through encouraging analysis of a practice-oriented
case study and offering reflective questions it provides a robust
introduction to how psychosocial perspectives may be applied within
health, social care, and education contexts. It offers students of
Social Work, Nursing, Education, Psychology and Child and
Adolescent Studies the critical and theoretical tools to evaluate
the interlocking psychosocial factors influencing the lives of
those who will be in their care.
|
You may like...
Midnights
Taylor Swift
CD
R394
Discovery Miles 3 940
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
|