A New Armenian Trauma Unfolds
Blog: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Carnegie Publications
The situation in Nagorno-Karabakh has revived memories of exile and pain in the diaspora community of Lebanon.
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Blog: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Carnegie Publications
The situation in Nagorno-Karabakh has revived memories of exile and pain in the diaspora community of Lebanon.
Blog: The RAND Blog
For people in the intelligence community, the risk of experiencing a variety of traumas is very real. Agencies should look more closely at their workforces to better understand the traumas their analysts face and what they can do to help.
Blog: Global Voices
We are a generation of war, that will live in the shadow of the wars that left scars beyond repair.
Blog: International Republican Institute
On October 14, IRI's Evidence and Learning Practice (ELP) organized a panel on conducting trauma-sensitive evaluations as part of the American Evaluation Association's (AEA) 2023 annual conference. The annual conference provides a forum for evaluators to discuss trends and priorities within the sector and share best practices for conducting effective and inclusive evaluations. IRI's portion […]
The post Leveraging Trauma-sensitive Data Collection Approaches to 'Do No Harm' appeared first on International Republican Institute.
Blog: Penn LDI
In the trauma bay and in the data on firearm injury, LDI Senior Fellow Elinore Kaufman searches for solutions to firearm violence. As rates of firearm injury deaths in the U.S. continue to outpace other countries', Kaufman's research is aimed at helping policymakers understand how their policy choices can help address this epidemic. Kaufman is […]
Blog: USAPP
In From the Ashes of History: Collective Trauma and the Making of International Politics, Adam Lerner argues that collective trauma – and the identity formation it precipitates – is a shaping force in international politics. Drawing on historical case studies from India, Israel and the US, Lerner makes a compelling case for incorporating a Trauma Studies approach into the … Continued
Blog: Global Voices
Having been abused herself, Alicia Bowen-McCulskie "envisioned safe spaces and opportunities for women and girls to access psychosocial support, resources and the care needed to aid in their healing process."
Blog: Eye on the World
This is the twelfth in a series of blogs on 'Spatial Justice in Dublin 8' (SJD8 #12), as a contribution to Maynooth University Social Justice Week 2022. Geography is interdisciplinary and open to the world. From activists in Inchicore, we learned of issues that are geographical and spatial, but that are much broader than the […]
Blog: Global Voices
Interview with Tatar queer language activist Marsel Ganeyev, whose aim is to "help minorities reconnect to their roots or overcome the emotional trauma"
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
Kaamil Ahmed's documentation of the Rohingya's plight details their trauma, death, and despair. The book's telling of their human longing for peace and a better life should enjoy a wide readership.
Blog: The RAND Blog
Russia's looming troop-retention and veteran-treatment problems are already visible on the horizon, even though they have been delayed by policy. By invading Ukraine, Russia has created a wave of severe trauma that will soon crash over its own country.
Blog: The RAND Blog
Far too many survivors of military sexual trauma are unable to access the generous benefits available to those injured by enemies overseas. Survivors are already far less likely to qualify for the full range of benefits and services available to those injured in combat, and the United States is doing nothing to rectify this injustice, allowing further inequities to fester.
Blog: The Axe Files with David Axelrod
Adam Frankel is a former senior speechwriter for President Barack Obama. He joins David to discuss his new memoir, "The Survivors: A Story of War, Inheritance, and Healing." The book is a remarkable story of family secrets, intergenerational trauma, and the process of coming to terms with life-changing revelations. He and David also discuss his family's legacy of public service, their shared experience working for Barack Obama, and more.
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Blog: The Axe Files with David Axelrod
Maryland Congressman Jamie Raskin rose to national prominence when he led the second impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump in January 2021, a proceeding that took place just weeks after two compounding traumas: the death of his son and the January 6th attack on the Capitol. Raskin joined David to talk about losing his son, Tommy, the January 6 insurrection and its aftermath, the cracks in the electoral college, if the country could survive another Trump presidency, and his new book, "Unthinkable: Trauma, Truth and the Trials of American Democracy."
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Blog: The Axe Files with David Axelrod
Anderson Cooper is now a well-known CNN anchor, but he got his start in journalism armed with just a camcorder and a fake press pass. Cooper is also part of the storied Vanderbilt family, which he writes about in his latest book Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty. He joined David to talk about the corrosive power of money and how its effects can ripple through generations, his mother's life and her capacity for overcoming trauma, losing his father at 10 years old, and how he hopes his book teaches his son Wyatt to feel connected to something beyond himself.
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