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1. Introduction to the book -- 2. Sentencing Rationale -- 3. The relationship between trauma and crime -- 4. Current acknowledgement of trauma in sentencing -- 5. Trauma-informed sentencing -- 6. Case Study (South Australian Sample): 4Rs - Realising; Recognising; Responding; Resisting re-traumatisation -- 7. Case Study: Aboriginal Australians -- Chapter 8: Case Study: Discussion of Trauma-informed sentencing of other vulnerable populations -- Chapter 9: Implications for practice and future directions -- 10. Conclusion.
In: Gender, Justice and Legal Feminism 4
Introduction and Background -- Theoretically Contextualising the Project -- Contextualising Legal Pluralism -- South Africa's History of Colonialism and Apartheid -- Locating Islam in South Africa: History of Mosques and Muslim Organisations -- Compromising Legislation – Upholding the Patriarchy -- Social Context of Women's Experiences -- The Collusion of the Patriarchs -- Muslim Personal Law and the State: Legal Pluralism and Its Discontents.
"The battle over Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court nomination was described by the media as a "turning point' in America's history of female witnessing" (Time), a "tale of two internets" (Wired), and a "duel with tears and fury" (NYT). Each of these headlines highlighted a significant aspect of what the hearings revealed about American culture: the triumph of women's voices in the age of #MeToo; anxieties around echo chambers that divide political communication; and the hyperemotional nature of politics in the era of far-right populism. None, however, captured the deepest, and perhaps most insidious, character of this event as a battle over who is a victim. While these accounts describe or explain victimhood as a dominant discourse of Western cultures at large, they do not address what kind of world is a world of proliferating victims where two sides compete to establish their suffering as more legitimate than that of others? How did it come to be as it is today? What are the benefits of living in it? And, more importantly, what are the costs? In Wronged!, Lilie Chouliaraki's grapples how the proliferation of victims produces its own victims by obfuscating truth itself, and populating public discourse with too many voices of pain while selectively authorizing some of those voices over others. Just like the spread of fake news blurs the boundary between fact and rumor, competing claims to pain blur the line between systemic and tactical suffering. Chouliaraki examines this distinction to navigate the difference "between fighting for victimized people," which demands an account of the conditions of their suffering, and "promoting a victimhood culture," which encourages claims to pain. Fighting for the victimized is the moral drive of her argument, while promoting a victimhood culture is the object of her analysis"--
"Countering Dispossession, Reclaiming Land tells the story of a remarkable movement of Indonesian workers who, starting in the early 1990s, occupied the agribusiness plantation where they worked and reclaimed collective control of the land. In the years since, movement members have cultivated diverse agricultural forests, undoing the damage done over nearly a century of agribusiness abuse. Author David E. Gilbert illustrates how these workers-turned-activists moved beyond industrial agriculture's exploitation of laborers and the environment to create a more emancipatory and ecologically attuned way of living with the land. At a time when capitalism has remade landscapes and reordered society, the Casiavera reclaiming movement serves as an inspiring example of what global struggles for social and environmental justice can achieve"--
"In the last four decades, China's economy and living standards have completely transformed. Wang Feng charts the origins, forces, and consequences of this meteoric rise in prosperity, shifting our perspective toward rural populations as drivers of global change, and anticipating possible headwinds for future growth"--
In: Lifeworlds
In: Knowledges, politics, histories series v.3
Compliance -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. 'We Are Poor, So WeKeep Quiet' -- Chapter 2. Good People Doing Bad Things -- Chapter 3. Tax Compliance Dancing -- Chapter 4. Surveillance, Discipline and Care -- Chapter 5. The Controversy of Voluntary Carbon Offsetting -- Chapter 6. Complying in the 'Right' Way -- Chapter 7. 'Making Safety Personal' -- Chapter 8. Compliant Rule-Bending -- Conclusion -- Index.
In: World Sustainability Series
Part I. Novel Sustainable Green Food Processing Technologies -- Chapter 1. Smart and Sustainable Food Production Technologies -- Chapter 2. Recent Trends in the application of Essential oils for preserving foods -- Chapter 3. A Novel sustainable Approach for Extraction of Pectin from Citrus and Dairy Waste -- Chapter 4. Extraction and Utilization of underutilized plant purslane 'Portulaca Oleracea' in food product formulation -- Part II. Circular Strategies for Recovery & Valorization -- Chapter 5. Effect of Ultrasonication on the Recovery of Essential Bioactive Compounds from Tomato Waste -- Chapter 6. Sustainable valorization of waste from mango processing sector -- Chapter 7. Sustainability in production of enzymes from Fruit & Vegetable waste -- Chapter 8. Utilization of fruit by-products to produce value-added products: Conventional utilization and emerging opportunities -- Chapter 9. Waste Valorization in Food Industries: A Review of Sustainable Approaches -- Part III. Sustainable Techniques for Food Safety & Food Diversity -- Chapter 10. Seaweed- A sustainable food source in the food industry -- Chapter 11. Medicinal Plants: sustainable scope to Nutraceuticals.
1. Micromorphology of Soils and Paleosols: Overview and Introduction -- 2. New Criteria to Identify Argillans as Evidence of Clay Illuviation -- 3. Modifications of Plasmic Fabric in SAT Vertisols in a Climosequence: Evidence for Holocene Climate Changes -- 4. Micromorphological Criteria to Identify Calcium Carbonates of Pedogenic (PC) and Non-Pedogenic (NPC) Origin in SAT Soils and their Relevance to Pedogenesis and Management -- 5. Micromorphology to understand Landscape Evolutions and Pedogenic Response to Neotectonics and Holocene climatic changes: A Case from Soils of the Ganga Basin -- 6. Micromorphological Approach to Identify Polygenesis in Soils -- 7. Micromorphology of the Paleosols to Reconstruct Late Quaternary Paleoclimatic Record, Alluvial Cyclicity and Stratigraphy of the Ganga Basin -- 8. Micromorphology to Distinguish Diagenetic Overprinting and Paleopedogenic Features in Lithified Paleosols of the Himalayan Foreland Basin -- 9. Micromorphology of the Calcic Soils of the Thar desert: Implication for Climate Change and Origin of Palygorskite -- 10 Summary and Concluding remarks.
Ein Übermaß an Hass ist das Ende der Demokratie. Brandanschläge auf Synagogen. Hetze an Schulen. Ein Mob, der das Existenzrecht Israels verneint: Judenhass, in Deutschland. Nach dem Terrorangriff der Hamas auf Israel zeigt sich einmal mehr, wie wenig das Versprechen des "Nie wieder" gilt und wie sehr Antisemitismus von verschiedenen Seiten gesellschaftsfähig geworden ist. Der Publizist Michel Friedman über das Versagen der Politik, die Ignoranz unserer Gesellschaft und darüber, wie wir verhindern können, dass die Gewalt gegen Jüdinnen und Juden weiter um sich greift. Denn es geht um alles: um unser aller Zukunft, um Freiheit und Demokratie. "Ich bin nicht bereit, mich von Menschen, die hassen, beeinflussen zu lassen. Ich bin nicht bereit, ihnen dieses Machtgefühl zu schenken. Ich bin nicht bereit, einen Teil meiner Identität aufgrund von Drohungen zu löschen. Ich verstehe nicht, warum Menschen, die selbst keine Juden sind, nicht bemerken, dass dort, wo die autoritäre Geisteshaltung ihren Platz gefunden hat, nicht nur die Minderheiten, sondern auch sie selbst ihre Lebensqualität verlieren. Die Schlinge des Autoritären schließt sich auch um ihr Leben. Ich bin nicht bereit zu akzeptieren, dass der Hass das letzte Wort hat"
In: Studies in contemporary antisemitism
"Three Faces of Antisemitism examines the three primary forms of antisemitism as they emerged in modern and contemporary Germany, and then in other countries. Essays draw on the author's historical scholarship over the years on the form antisemitism assumed on the far right in Weimar and Nazi Germany, in the Communist regime in East Germany, and in the West German radical left, and in Islamist organizations during World War II and the Holocaust, and afterwards in the Middle East. The resurgence of antisemitism since the attacks of September 11, 2001 has origins in the ideas, events and circumstances in Europe and the Middle East in the half century from the 1920s to the 1970s. This book covers the period since 1945 when neo-Nazism was on the fringes of Western and world politics, and the persistence of antisemitism took place primarily when its leftist and Islamist forms combined antisemitism with anti-Zionism in attacks on the state of Israel. The collection includes recent essays of commentary that draw attention to the simultaneous presence of antisemitism's three faces. While scholarship on the antisemitism of the Nazi regime and the Holocaust remains crucial, the scholarly, intellectual and political effort to fight antisemitism in our times requires examination of antisemitism's leftist and Islamist forms as well. This book will be of interest to scholars researching antisemitism, racism, conspiracy theories, the far right, the far left, and Islamism"--