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For over 70 years, the United Nations has worked to advance human
conditions globally through its historic agenda for a more
peaceful, prosperous, and just world. Through the work of the
General Assembly and other programs like the UNESCO World
Conferences on Adult Education, the organization has taken a
leading role in bringing world leaders together to dialogue on
world issues and to set agendas for advancing social and economic
justice among and within the regions of the world. The underlying
themes of the United Nations' agenda over the years have been world
peace, economic justice, addressing the needs of the world's most
vulnerable populations, and protecting the environment. We draw
from the two last two declarations from which the Millennium
Development Goals (September 2000) and the Sustainable Development
Goals (September 2015) were adopted by world leaders with a focus
on addressing the needs of the most vulnerable populations. In this
declaration, world leaders committed to uphold the long-standing
principles of the organization and to combat extreme poverty,
hunger, disease, illiteracy, environmental degradation and
discrimination and violence against women. The overall objective of
the book is to highlight the conditions of vulnerable populations
from various contexts globally, and the role adult and higher
education can play (and is playing) in advancing the United Nations
agenda of social and economic justice and environmental
sustainability. Adult education, through research, teaching, and
service engagements is contributing to this ongoing effort but as
many scholars have noted, our work remains invisible and
undocumented. Therefore, this book highlights adult education's
critical partnership in addressing these global issues. It will
also begin to fill the void that exists in adult education
literature on internationalization of the field.
For over 70 years, the United Nations has worked to advance human
conditions globally through its historic agenda for a more
peaceful, prosperous, and just world. Through the work of the
General Assembly and other programs like the UNESCO World
Conferences on Adult Education, the organization has taken a
leading role in bringing world leaders together to dialogue on
world issues and to set agendas for advancing social and economic
justice among and within the regions of the world. The underlying
themes of the United Nations' agenda over the years have been world
peace, economic justice, addressing the needs of the world's most
vulnerable populations, and protecting the environment. We draw
from the two last two declarations from which the Millennium
Development Goals (September 2000) and the Sustainable Development
Goals (September 2015) were adopted by world leaders with a focus
on addressing the needs of the most vulnerable populations. In this
declaration, world leaders committed to uphold the long-standing
principles of the organization and to combat extreme poverty,
hunger, disease, illiteracy, environmental degradation and
discrimination and violence against women. The overall objective of
the book is to highlight the conditions of vulnerable populations
from various contexts globally, and the role adult and higher
education can play (and is playing) in advancing the United Nations
agenda of social and economic justice and environmental
sustainability. Adult education, through research, teaching, and
service engagements is contributing to this ongoing effort but as
many scholars have noted, our work remains invisible and
undocumented. Therefore, this book highlights adult education's
critical partnership in addressing these global issues. It will
also begin to fill the void that exists in adult education
literature on internationalization of the field.
A collaborative endeavour by immigrant women of colour who invite
readers to join in the conversation as they dialogue about the
immigrant experience in the US and particularly in the ivory tower.
Collectively, the narratives in the book strive to further the
discourse regarding the multiple interrelationships of identity,
culture, self, others, pedagogy, and institutions of higher
education. The accounts that follow describe what it means to be a
transnational student, professor, scholar, and administrator within
the contested terrain of higher education. Favouring an inclusive
definition of academe over an elitist one, this book affirms the
voices of those women inhabiting different spaces in higher
education institutions. The women in this book have experienced the
halls of academe in different ways, not always as faculty at a
research university. The narratives are organised geographically
and draw out the experiences of the third wave of immigrants coming
from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean (or West Indies), and Latin
America. This book brings together the multidimensional voices of
immigrant women of colour to chronicle the immigrant experience in
the United States. This book could serve as a text in courses in
international education, higher education, intercultural and
multicultural education, women's studies, qualitative research
studies, and Asian, Caribbean, and Latin American Studies.
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