Engendering forced migration : theory and practice /

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நூற்பட்டியல் விவரங்கள்
மற்ற எழுத்தாளர்கள்: Indra, Doreen Marie.
வடிவம்: புத்தகம்
மொழி:English
வெளியீடப்பட்டது: New York : Berghahn Books, 1999.
தொகுதி:Refugee and forced migration studies ; v. 5.
பகுதிகள்:
குறியீடுகள்: குறிச்சொல் இணை
குறியீடுகள் இல்லை, இந்த குறிச்சொல்லை முதலில் பதிவு செய்யுங்கள்!
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020 |a 1571811346 (acid-free paper) 
020 |a 1571811354 
035 0 |a ocm39275873 
040 |a DLC  |c DLC  |d DLC 
050 0 0 |a HV640  |b .E56 1999 
082 0 0 |a 325  |2 21 
245 0 0 |a Engendering forced migration :  |b theory and practice /  |c edited by Doreen Indra. 
260 |a New York :  |b Berghahn Books,  |c 1999. 
300 |a xx, 390 p., [6] p. of plates ;  |c 22 cm. 
490 1 |a Refugee and forced migration studies ;  |v v. 5 
500 |a Errata slip inserted. 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references (p. [355]-379) and index. 
505 0 0 |g Chapter 1  |t Not a "Room of One's Own": Engendering Forced Migration Knowledge and Practice /  |r Doreen Indra  |g 1 --  |t Gender and Feminist Anthropology  |g 3 --  |t Engendering Development  |g 9 --  |t Gender and Forced Migration  |g 16 --  |t Beyond a Room of One's Own  |g 20 --  |g Chapter 2  |t Gendering Those Uprooted by 'Development' /  |r Elizabeth Colson  |g 23 --  |t Gender, Development, Refugees, and Resettlement  |g 23 --  |t The Kariba Resettlement  |g 27 --  |t Gendered Responses  |g 37 --  |g Chapter 3  |t Interview with Barbara Harrell-Bond /  |r Doreen Indra  |g 40 --  |g Chapter 4  |t Girls and War Zones: Troubling Questions /  |r Carolyn Nordstrom  |g 63 --  |t Troubling Questions  |g 66 --  |t Girls and War Zones: Following Threads in Mozambique  |g 66 --  |t On War Zones and Peace Zones  |g 71 --  |t War Zone Solutions  |g 75 --  |g Chapter 5  |t Gendered Violence in War: Reflections on Transnationalist and Comparative Frameworks in Militarized Conflict Zones /  |r Wenona Giles  |g 83 --  |t Household, Home, and Immanence  |g 84 -- 
505 0 0 |t Comparative Analysis  |g 87 --  |t Gendering Homes and Women's Bodies in War  |g 88 --  |t The Refugee Camp-As-Home  |g 90 --  |g Chapter 6  |t Gender Relief and Politics During the Afghan War /  |r Diana Cammack  |g 94 --  |t War and Gender  |g 95 --  |t War, Factionalism, and Flight  |g 97 --  |t Exile and Aid  |g 100 --  |t Gender and Aid  |g 101 --  |t Gender and Violence  |g 104 --  |t Gender, Aid, and the Taleban  |g 113 --  |t The Way Forward  |g 118 --  |g Chapter 7  |t Response to Cammack /  |r Peter Marsden  |g 124 --  |g Chapter 8  |t Upsetting the Cart: Forced Migration and Gender Issues, the African Experience /  |r Patrick Matlou  |g 128 --  |t Root Causes of Forced Migration in Africa  |g 128 --  |t The International Refugee Regime: Helpers or Spoilers?  |g 129 --  |t The Increasing Impact of War on Women and Children: Great Losses, Few Gains  |g 132 --  |t Assistance Programs and the Reinforcement of Male Domination  |g 136 --  |t Resettlement: Who Goes Where and Why  |g 138 --  |t Voluntary Repatriation  |g 139 --  |g Chapter 9 
505 0 0 |t Women Migrants of Kagera Region, Tanzania: The Need for Empowerment /  |r Charles David Smith  |g 146 --  |t Forced Migration and Gender Constraints  |g 147 --  |t Production in Female-Headed Households  |g 154 --  |t Access to Capital: The Pattern of Income-Generation  |g 156 --  |t Patterns of Expenditure in Male- and Female-Headed Households  |g 158 --  |g Chapter 10  |t The Relevance of Gendered Approaches to Refugee Health: A Case Study in Hagadera, Kenya /  |r Marleen Boelaert, Fabienne Vautier, Tine Dusauchoit, Wim Van Damme, Monique Van Dormael  |g 165 --  |t Methods  |g 167 --  |t Refugee Women in Hagadera: Are Their Health Needs Different?  |g 168 --  |t Are Health Workers Aware of Gender Issues in Health, and Do They Act on Them?  |g 171 --  |t Are Health Emergency Programs for Refugees in Need of a More Gendered Approach?  |g 174 --  |g Chapter 11  |t Post-Soviet Russian Migration from the New Independent States: Experiences of Women Migrants /  |r Natalya Kosmarskaya  |g 177 -- 
505 0 0 |t Two Migration Patterns: A Comparative Overview  |g 179 --  |t European and Russian Migration Flows  |g 181 --  |t A Comparative Look at Relevant Legislation and Policies  |g 183 --  |t Reefs of Post-Soviet Repatriation: A Case Study of Central Russia  |g 187 --  |t Russian Women: The Impact of Migration on Family Life  |g 190 --  |t Russian Women Forced Migrants: Identity, Social Status, and Societal Access  |g 193 --  |g Chapter 12  |t A Space for Remembering: Home-Pedagogy and Exilic Latina Women's Identities /  |r Ines Gomez  |g 200 --  |t The School Curriculum As a Site of Amnesia  |g 203 --  |t The Significance of Nostalgic Women's Accounts in the Configuration of Home-Pedagogy  |g 206 --  |t And Finally  |g 215 --  |g Chapter 13  |t Eritrean Canadian Refugee Households As Sites of Gender Renegotiation /  |r Atsuko Matsuoka, John Sorenson  |g 218 --  |t The Eritrean Diaspora  |g 219 --  |t Feminist Approaches to Refugee and Diaspora Studies  |g 221 --  |t Effects of Forced Migration on Households  |g 222 -- 
505 0 0 |t Forced Migration and Constructions of Gender  |g 225 --  |t Reconceptualizing Household Gender Relations: Masculinity and Power  |g 237 --  |g Chapter 14  |t Negotiating Masculinity in the Reconstruction of Social Place: Eritrean and Ethiopian Refugees in the United States and Sweden /  |r Lucia Ann McSpadden  |g 242 --  |t Eritrean and Ethiopian Cultural Themes: Masculinity and Power  |g 247 --  |t A Profile of Migrant Men  |g 249 --  |t Migrant Priorities  |g 251 --  |t A Longitudinal View: Education, Work, and Status  |g 255 --  |t Private Lives: Choices and Negotiations  |g 257 --  |g Chapter 15  |t The Human Rights of Refugees with Special Reference to Muslim Refugee Women /  |r Khadija Elmadmad  |g 261 --  |t Why Pay Greater Attention to the Protection of Muslim Refugee Women?  |g 263 --  |t The Limited Protection of Muslim Refugee Women  |g 266 --  |t How to Better Protect Refugee Muslim Women  |g 267 --  |g Chapter 16 
505 0 0 |t A Comparative Analysis of the Canadian, US, and Australian Directives on Gender Persecution and Refugee Status /  |r Audrey Macklin  |g 272 --  |t Sources of Inspiration  |g 274 --  |t Structure of the Decision-Making Bodies  |g 275 --  |t Substance of Refugee Determination  |g 282 --  |t State Protection  |g 288 --  |t Nexus to Convention Ground  |g 294 --  |t Future Challenges  |g 302 --  |g Chapter 17  |t Women and Refugee Status: Beyond the Public/Private Dichotomy in UK Asylum Policy /  |r Heaven Crawley  |g 308 --  |t The Normative Structures of International Refugee Law  |g 310 --  |t Privatizing 'Persecution'  |g 311 --  |t 'Serious Harm' and the Violation of Women's Human Rights  |g 312 --  |t Engendering the Concept of State Protection  |g 316 --  |t Depoliticization and Problems in Grounding the Asylum Claim  |g 320 --  |t Beyond the Public/Private Dichotomy in British Asylum Policy?  |g 328 --  |g Chapter 18  |t The Problem of Gender-Related Persecution: A Challenge of International Protection /  |r Lisa Gilad  |g 334 -- 
505 0 0 |t Anthropological Data  |g 337 --  |g Chapter 19  |t Anthropologists As 'Expert Witnesses' /  |r Sidney Waldron  |g 343 --  |t If Anthropologists Are Often Inexpert 'Experts', Why Are They Required?  |g 344 --  |t Advocacy and Human Rights  |g 346. 
650 0 |a Forced migration. 
650 0 |a Women refugees. 
650 0 |a Women immigrants. 
700 1 |a Indra, Doreen Marie. 
776 0 8 |i Online version:  |t Engendering forced migration.  |d New York : Berghahn Books, 1999  |w (OCoLC)945917726 
830 0 |a Refugee and forced migration studies ;  |v v. 5. 
988 |a 20020608 
906 |0 DLC