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The theme of the 1997 INTERACT conference, 'Discovering New Worlds
ofHCI', signals major changes that are taking place with the
expansion of new technologies into fresh areas of work and leisure
throughout the world and new pervasive, powerful systems based on
multimedia and the internet. HCI has a vital role to play in these
new worlds, to ensure that people using the new technologies are
empowered rather than subjugated to the technology that they
increasingly have to use. In addition, outcomes from HCI research
studies over the past 20 years are now finding their way into many
organisations and helping to improve and enhance work practices.
These factors have strongly influenced the INTERACT'97 Committee
when creating the conference programme, with the result that,
besides the more traditional HCI research and education focus found
in previous INTERACT conferences, one strand of the 1997 conference
has been devoted to industry and another to multimedia. The growth
in the IFIP TCI3 committee itself reflects the expansion ofHCI into
new worlds. Membership oflFIP TC13 has risen to now include
representatives of 24 IFIP member country societies from many parts
of the world. In 1997, IFIP TCl3 breaks new ground by holding its
sixth INTERACT conference in the Asia-Pacific region. This is a
significant departure from previous INTERACT conferences, that were
all held in Europe, and is especially important for the
Asia-Pacific region, as HCI expands beyond its traditional base.
In Sudan Media Makers: Writings from the Diaspora, Mohamed A. Satti
identifies and interviews six prominent Sudanese media
personalities in the diaspora to tell their stories and examine
their contributions to Sudanese media. The media and communication
professionals are from a variety of backgrounds including print and
television journalists, a political cartoonist, and a novelist.
Throughout the book, Satti connects the lives of these media makers
to the history of Sudan from the last three decades to the present,
providing provides insights on Sudan, Sudanese media, and the
Sudanese people.
No event shaped the twentieth century more than World War II, and
no leader shaped the conduct of the war and the formation of the
modern world more than President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In this
anthology, leading scholars examine Roosevelt's role in the
international arena, focusing on his diplomacy with Europe, Russia,
the Baltic States, Canada, and the Caribbean; his relations with
American Jews in the face of the Holocaust; his military
appointments; and the operation of the Civilian War Services
Division.
No event shaped the twentieth century more than World War II, and
no leader shaped the conduct of the war and the formation of the
modern world more than President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In this
anthology, leading scholars examine Roosevelt's role in the
international arena, focusing on his diplomacy with Europe, Russia,
the Baltic States, Canada, and the Caribbean; his relations with
American Jews in the face of the Holocaust; his military
appointments; and the operation of the Civilian War Services
Division.
The theme of the 1997 INTERACT conference, 'Discovering New Worlds
ofHCI', signals major changes that are taking place with the
expansion of new technologies into fresh areas of work and leisure
throughout the world and new pervasive, powerful systems based on
multimedia and the internet. HCI has a vital role to play in these
new worlds, to ensure that people using the new technologies are
empowered rather than subjugated to the technology that they
increasingly have to use. In addition, outcomes from HCI research
studies over the past 20 years are now finding their way into many
organisations and helping to improve and enhance work practices.
These factors have strongly influenced the INTERACT'97 Committee
when creating the conference programme, with the result that,
besides the more traditional HCI research and education focus found
in previous INTERACT conferences, one strand of the 1997 conference
has been devoted to industry and another to multimedia. The growth
in the IFIP TCI3 committee itself reflects the expansion ofHCI into
new worlds. Membership oflFIP TC13 has risen to now include
representatives of 24 IFIP member country societies from many parts
of the world. In 1997, IFIP TCl3 breaks new ground by holding its
sixth INTERACT conference in the Asia-Pacific region. This is a
significant departure from previous INTERACT conferences, that were
all held in Europe, and is especially important for the
Asia-Pacific region, as HCI expands beyond its traditional base.
Steve Howard departed for the Sudan in the early 1980s as an
American graduate student beginning a three-year journey in which
he would join and live with the Republican Brotherhood, the Sufi
Muslim group led by the visionary Mahmoud Mohamed Taha. Taha was a
religious intellectual who participated in the early days of
Sudan's anticolonial struggle, but quickly turned his movement into
a religious reform effort based on his radical reading of the
Qur'an. He was executed in 1985 for apostasy. Decades after
returning to the life of an academic in the United States, Howard
brings us this memoir of his time with the Republican Brotherhood,
who advocated, among other things, equality for women. Modern
Muslims describes Howard's path to learning not only about Islam
and Sufism but also about Sudan's history and culture. When the
Brotherhood was thrust into confrontation with Sudan's
then-president Jaafar Nimeiry, Howard had a front-line perspective
on the difficult choices communities make as they try to reform and
practice their faith freely. As well as a story of personal
transformation, the book offers an insider's perspective on a
modernist nonviolent Islamic movement that thrived and was brutally
suppressed. An important book for our times, Modern Muslims yields
significant insights for our understanding of modern Islam, African
history, and contemporary geopolitics.
Steve Howard departed for the Sudan in the early 1980s as an
American graduate student beginning a three-year journey in which
he would join and live with the Republican Brotherhood, the Sufi
Muslim group led by the visionary Mahmoud Mohamed Taha. Taha was a
religious intellectual who participated in the early days of
Sudan’s anticolonial struggle, but quickly turned his movement
into a religious reform effort based on his radical reading of the
Qur’an. He was executed in 1985 for apostasy. Decades after
returning to the life of an academic in the United States, Howard
brings us this memoir of his time with the Republican Brotherhood,
who advocated, among other things, equality for women. Modern
Muslims describes Howard’s path to learning not only about Islam
and Sufism but also about Sudan’s history and culture. When the
Brotherhood was thrust into confrontation with Sudan’s
then-president Jaafar Nimeiry, Howard had a front-line perspective
on the difficult choices communities make as they try to reform and
practice their faith freely. As well as a story of personal
transformation, the book offers an insider’s perspective on a
modernist nonviolent Islamic movement that thrived and was brutally
suppressed. An important book for our times, Modern Muslims yields
significant insights for our understanding of modern Islam, African
history, and contemporary geopolitics.
AIDS is now the leading cause of death in Africa, where
twenty-eight million people are HIV-positive, and where some twelve
million children have lost one or both parents to AIDS. In
Zimbabwe, 45 percent of children under the age of five are
HIV-positive, and the epidemic has shortened life expectancy by
twenty-two years. A fifteen-year-old in Botswana or South Africa
has a one-in-two chance of dying of AIDS. AIDS deaths are so
widespread in sub-Saharan Africa that small children now play a new
game called "Funerals." The Children of Africa Confront AIDS
depicts the reality of how African children deal with the AIDS
epidemic, and how the discourse of their vulnerability affects acts
of coping and courage. A project of the Institute for the African
Child at Ohio University, The Children of Africa Confront AIDS cuts
across disciplines and issues to focus on the world's most
marginalized population group, the children of Africa. Editors
Arvind Singhal and Stephen Howard join conversations between
humanitarian and political activists and academics, asking, "What
shall we do?" Such discourse occurs in African contexts ranging
from a social science classroom in Botswana to youth groups in
Kenya and Ghana. The authors describe HIV/AIDS in its macro
contexts of vulnerable children and the continent's democratization
movements and also in its national contexts of civil conflict,
rural poverty, youth organizations, and agencies working on the
ground. Singhal, Howard, and other contributors draw on compelling
personal experience in descriptions of HIV/AIDS interventions for
children in difficult circumstances and present thoughtful insights
into data gathered from surveys and observations concerning this
terrible epidemic.
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