Telling the stories of young refugees in a range of international settings, this book explores how newcomers navigate urban spaces and negotiate multiple injustices in their everyday lives, giving voice to refugee youth from a wide variety of social backgrounds.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
This volume contributes a Latin American perspective to the global debate on populism. It argues that Latin America in its rich and early experience of populism is a valuable laboratory to take our understanding forward and to address the question of whether populism goes beyond the dichotomy of left and right and is a new political phenomenon.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Original Title Page -- Original Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Preface -- Table of Contents -- I: Social-Imperialism -- II: Social-Darwinism: Benjamin Kidd and Karl Pearson -- III: A Party of National Efficiency: The Liberal-Imperialists and the Fabians -- IV: Joseph Chamberlain's 'Squalid Argument' -- V: The Social-Imperialism of the Tariff Reform League -- VI: Fabianism and Liberal-Imperialism, 1903-1914 -- VII: The Two Imperialisms -- VIII: Sir Halford Mackinder: Theorist of Imperialism -- IX: Viscount Milner: Social-Imperial Idealist -- X: William Cunningham: National Economist -- XI: Sir William Ashley as 'Socialist of the Chair' -- XII: Lord Roberts and Robert Blatchford -- XIII: Conclusion -- Selected Bibliography -- Index.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Cover -- Half Title -- Endorsements -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Contributors -- Disclaimer -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- 1. An Introduction to the Team and Project -- 2. The Legitimacy of Trust -- 3. More Than a Number! -- 4. Flexibility: Negotiation and Discretion -- 5. I Have Never Met a Child That Healed in a Cell -- 6. From Adversity to University -- 7. We're Only Human -- 8. Relationships Are the Agents of Change -- 9. Time for Change -- Afterword -- Index.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Cover -- Endorsement -- Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Notes -- References -- 1 Culture at the Crossroads of the Twenty-First-Century Transitions -- 1.1 Setting the Context: Evolutionary Trends in the Labour and Cultural Spheres -- 1.2 Recent Transformations Within the Field of Culture and Cultural Work -- 1.2.1 Artists and Cultural Workers as Epitomes of the 'New Professionals' -- 1.2.2 The Emergence of New Institutional Arrangements for Culture: Social Enterprises -- 1.2.3 Transformative Collective Entrepreneurial Endeavours: The Social and Solidarity Economy -- 1.2.4 The Incorporation of Culture Into the Transition Discourse -- 1.3 SMart and Its Presence Across Europe -- References -- 2 Social Enterprise as a Vehicle for Social Innovation in Culture -- 2.1 Preliminary Concepts -- 2.1.1 Social Value -- 2.1.2 Social Transformation -- 2.1.3 Social Innovation -- 2.2 The Varied Landscape of Social Enterprise -- 2.2.1 Conceptualising Social Enterprise -- 2.2.1.1 Social Enterprise, the Social Economy, the Solidarity Economy and the Third Sector -- 2.2.1.2 Recent Developments in Social Enterprise Research, Policy and Practice -- 2.2.2 Social Enterprise and Social Transformation -- 2.3 Approaching Social Transformation Through Social Innovation -- 2.3.1 Social Innovation as a Novel Institutional Space -- 2.3.1.1 Main Approaches to Social Innovation: Technological Versus Emancipatory -- 2.3.1.2 Types of Social Innovation -- 2.3.1.3 A Working Definition of Social Innovation for the Current Research -- 2.3.2 Framing Social Enterprise Within Social Innovation -- Notes -- References -- 3 Culture as a Field for Social Innovation and Social Enterprise -- 3.1 The Complex Relationship Between Culture and Social Transformation.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Conceptual and theoretical framework -- Extremism and extremist narrative building in Pakistan -- Counter-extremism narratives in Pakistan -- Counter-narratives and socio-political reality -- Towards building comprehensive counter-narratives: reflections and suggestions.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures -- Series Editors' Introduction -- Acknowledgments -- A Note on Terminology -- Chapter 1: Children Go Streaming -- Television Goes Streaming -- Why Streaming Media Matters -- Streaming Media as a Literacy Practice -- Streaming Media Shapes Interaction -- Streaming Media Shapes Identities -- Streaming Media Plays with Time -- Streaming Media Situate Identities Through Everydayness and Repetition -- Streaming Media as a Heteroglossic, Choronotopic, and Feminist Space -- An Overview of Literacy and Identity Through Streaming Media: Kids, Teens, and Representation on Netflix -- Summing Up -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2: Streaming Media, Streaming Time: How Netflix's Children's Programming Changes How Time Works -- Theoretical Background -- Chronotopic Time on Netflix Children's Programming -- Narrative, Time, and Netflix Children's Programming -- Time on Repeat -- Spanning Time -- Reflections and Connections -- Summing Up -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3: Visible Interface, Invisible Algorithms: Children Enter into Netflix's Algorithmic Space -- Netflix's Visible Space -- Netflix's Multimodal Space(s) -- Netflix's Movable Space(s) -- Netflix's Accessible Space(s) -- Netflix's Invisible Space -- Glimpsing Netflix's Algorithmic Spaces -- Reflections and Connections -- Summing Up -- Note -- References -- Chapter 4: Interactive Dialogic Play: Interactive Streaming Media on Netflix -- Background -- Interactive Dialogic Play in Netflix's Interactive Shows -- Constrained Choices -- Multimodal Immersiveness -- Heteroglossic Narrative and Identities -- Transgressive Possibilities -- Reflections and Connections -- Summing Up -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 5: Girls Are Snapping: Feminism in Netflix's Youth Programming -- Background.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- List of illustrations -- Figures -- Tables -- Map -- List of fieldnote extracts -- List of conversations -- Foreword: Moving beyond Eurocentric tourist studies, by Tim Edensor -- References -- Acknowledgments -- Guidance for reading transcripts -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Home for summer vacation -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2: Assembling diasporicness: More than the sum of its parts -- i Attuning ethnomethodologically on 'diasporicness' -- Turning away from some assumptions about migration -- Descent and place as dimensions of diaspora -- ii Observing affective practices and leisure as 'diasporic' -- Incorporating mobilities into 'diasporicness' -- iii Three forces in assemblage -- References -- Chapter 3: Vignettes: Attachments, embodiments, insulations -- i Embodiments: Starting the journey -- Insha'allah departure -- Conviviality on the road: Sharing stops, caravans, and problems -- ii Attachments: Generational mobilities between Morocco and Europe -- Generations of empire -- Generations of migration -- Openings and closings -- iii Attachments: The nostalgia of 'home' -- Multi-sited familial 'home' -- 'Home' in 'knowing the country' -- Nostalgic 'home' -- iv Embodiments: Diasporic, touristic, citizens -- Citizen tourists -- Being elite consumers, diasporically -- v Attachments: Habitual mobilities -- Pulled by the status quo -- Habitual spontaneity -- Institutionalized mobility -- Rhythms, habits, and institutions -- vi Embodiments: Crossing borders -- Territorial threshold -- vii Insulations: Familial obligations -- Limiting exposure -- viii Attachments: Resisting pressure -- Visiting without family -- Not visiting -- Losing the habit -- Negotiating pressures -- ix Insulations: A typical day -- Typical young men -- Typical young women.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
1. Introduction: Refugee resilience, adaptation, and agency in Jordan and Lebanon -- 2. Forced migration, resilience, and informal adaptive mechanisms: A literature review -- 3. Informal livelihood strategies of Syrian refugees in Jordan and Lebanon: A conceptual framework and comparative perspective -- 4. A review of livelihoods policies and opportunities for Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Jordan -- 5. Syrian refugees and Lebanon's agriculture sector: Exploitation and absorption amongst an 'invisible' workforce -- 6. Informal livelihoods of Syrian refugee female heads of households in the Bekaa Valley camps in Lebanon -- 7. Syrian refugee micro-entrepreneurs in Lebanon and Jordan -- 8. The livelihoods of the Bani Khalid tribe in Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon after the 2011 Syria crisis -- 9. Conducting research with Syrian refugees: Reflections and experiences of researchers and practitioners in Lebanon and Jordan -- 10. Conclusion: Reflections and research directions -- Index.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries: