Introduction: Why Jewish, Muslim, and Queer? -- Part I. Boundary Crossings and Intersectionality -- 1. Queer-Jewish-Muslim: Constructing Hyphenated Religious Identities through Tactics of Intersubjectivity -- 2. Queer Disguises: Jewish Women's Performance of Race and Gender in the Colonial Maghreb -- 3. "A Living Tableau of Queerness": The Orient at the Crossroads of Genre and Gender in Proust's Recherche -- Part II. Public Discourse and Identity -- 4. Queering the Abrahamic Scriptures -- 5. A Corpus-Assisted Analysis of the Discursive Construction of LGBT Muslims and Jews in UK Media -- Part III. Building Community, Forging Solidarity -- 6. Religious Life Is Life Together: Ritual, Liminality, and Communitas among Queer Jews in Postsecular Britain -- 7. Eid Parties, Iftar Dinners, and Pride Parades: Navigating Queer Muslim Identity through Community -- Afterword: Lessons in Historical Nominalism -- Contributors -- Index.
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The Conference of Parties (COP) of the multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) provides a platform at a specific periodicity (one, two or three years) to review work of the Convention in question. The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is a 'universal' convention with 198 parties. The 28th annual meeting of the COP (UNFCCC) was held in Dubai (UAE) during 30 November - 13 December 2023. The UN provides 'secretariat' support to the UNFCCC, hence the usage of prefix 'United Nations'. It is called a 'framework convention' since it was adopted with a bare skeleton on 09 May 1992. It required 'fleshing out' of the UNFCCC with required elements to make it work for the "'ultimate objective" of "stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system" (Article 2). It led to the adoption of the ("related legal instruments") 1997 Kyoto Protocol and 2015 Paris Agreement. The climate change regime now comprises these three legal instruments that seek to address the global climate problematique. Whereas COP27 (Sharm El-Shaik; 06–21 November 2022) was known for adoption of the decision on "loss and damage" funding for vulnerable countries hit hard by climate disasters, COP28 unveiled the first global climate 'stocktake'. This took place on the heels of UNEP Emissions Gap Report (20 November 2023) that issued warming that "world is heading for a temperature rise far above the Paris Agreement goals unless countries deliver more than they have promised". The UNEP report called for the GHG emissions (by 2030) to "fall by 28 per cent for the Paris Agreement 2°C pathway and 42 per cent for the 1.5°C pathway". Thus, there is a big chasm between what is laid down in the climate change regulatory framework, what is scientifically ordained and what is actually given effect on the ground by the states Parties. After 30 years (1994–2024), the resultant 'conundrum' presents a challenge at this juncture of planetary crisis. It calls for the state Parties to the global climate change regime to engage in a major course correction in the current global climate change regulatory approaches for securing our planetary future.
Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) poses a major threat to public health worldwide, particularly in low-income countries. The current long (20 month) and arduous treatment regime uses powerful drugs with side-effects that include mental ill-health. It has a high loss-to-follow-up (25%) and higher case fatality and lower cure-rates than those with drug sensitive tuberculosis (TB). While some national TB programmes provide small financial allowances to patients, other aspects of psychosocial ill-health, including iatrogenic ones, are not routinely assessed or addressed. We aimed to develop an intervention to improve psycho-social well-being for MDR-TB patients in Nepal. To do this we conducted qualitative work with MDR-TB patients, health professionals and the National TB programme (NTP) in Nepal. We conducted semi-structured interviews (SSIs) with 15 patients (10 men and 5 women, aged 21 to 68), four family members and three frontline health workers. In addition, three focus groups were held with MDR-TB patients and three with their family members. We conducted a series of meetings and workshops with key stakeholders to design the intervention, working closely with the NTP to enable government ownership. Our findings highlight the negative impacts of MDR-TB treatment on mental health, with greater impacts felt among those with limited social and financial support, predominantly married women. Michie et al's (2011) framework for behaviour change proved helpful in identifying corresponding practice- and policy-level changes. The findings from this study emphasise the need for tailored psycho-social support. Recent work on simple psychological support packages for the general population can usefully be adapted for use with people with MDR-TB.