Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_788942182
    ISSN: 0003-5459
    In: Anthropologica, Toronto, Ont. : University of Toronto Press, 1955, 56(2014), 1, Seite 21-32, 0003-5459
    In: volume:56
    In: year:2014
    In: number:1
    In: pages:21-32
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    UID:
    almahu_9948664917202882
    Format: 1 online resource (274 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453912782
    Series Statement: New Literacies and Digital Epistemologies 63
    Content: Within community-based digital literacies work, a fundamental question remains unanswered: Where are the stories and reflections of the researchers, scholars, and community workers themselves? We have learned much about contexts, discourses, and the multimodal nature of meaning making in literacy and digital media experiences. However, we have learned very little about those who initiate, facilitate, and direct these community-based multiliteracies and digital media projects. In Community-Based Multiliteracies & Digital Media Projects: Questioning Assumptions and Exploring Realities, contributors discuss exemplary work in the field of community-based digital literacies, while providing an insightful and critical perspective on how we begin to write ourselves into the stories of our work. In doing so, the book makes a powerful contribution to digital literacies praxis and pedagogy – within and outside of community-based contexts.
    Content: «What I so appreciate about this important volume is that the authors take up as central the kinds of conversations that too often only happen off the record. Fearlessly, they explore the messiness of research on digital media literacies. They ask what to do when things don’t go as planned, when deeply personal stories go public, when intentions bump up against realities within the politics of ‘doing good.’ We all need to think deeply about these issues together, and to speak of them out loud and on the record. We need methods to embed reflection and critical analysis of process into multiliteracies research, which is precisely the mandate this collection delivers on, with clarity and courage.» (Dr. Elisabeth Soep, Senior Producer and Research Director, Youth Radio) «By playing at the intersection of the digital literacy and community context, the editors and their co-authors move beyond traditional conversations about the pedagogical and programmatic mechanics of utilizing digital media to the criti-cal examination of digital literacies in specific contexts and the associated chal-lenges that accompany this work. As a STEAM educator and community advocate, I believe that through their work, Heather M. Pleasants and Dana E. Salter have created an invaluable space to interrogate some of the key questions facing those hoping to empower educators and students to utilize digital media to change and improve their world.» (Dr. Brian Williams, Director, Alonzo A. Crim Center for Urban Educational Excellence, and Assistant Professor, Early Childhood Education, Georgia State University) «This is a beautifully conceptualized collection. The editors have invited experienced, self-reflective, community-based practitioners to ‘write themselves into the story’ of their work and the result is a nuanced conversation about the intricacies, ambiguities, challenges, and the inspiration of collaborating across boundaries to create media that matter. The insights shared and questions explored are invaluably generative. They help us think critically about the ethics, integrity, and purposes of our labor. They remind us that reflection into process is not for the footnotes; rather, it is central to the story of social justice work.» (Darcy Alexandra, visual anthropologist, writer, educator, and documentary practitioner, Centre for Transcultural Research and Media Practice, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland) «[T]his Text is far more than a collection of interesting and powerful stories, but also provides grounded insights and design principles to guide the ethical, relational, methodological, pedagogical, and longitudinal aspects of digital media creation in community collaborations. This is not a ‘how to text’, rather it is a ‘why to’ text that casts an important gaze away from the products of media production and on to the interactions that shape the collaborative process. [...] This edited collection adds critical voices to the conversation about what it means to engage people in participatory media practices within their communities. In doing so, Heather Pleasants and Dana Salter make a vital contribution to the base of scholarship that informs our conceptions of literate practice.» (Michael Manderino, Teachers College Record, January 2015)
    Note: Contents: Lalitha Vasudevan: The Complicated Work of «Making the Familiar Strange» in Community-Based Literacies Research and Practice – Heather M. Pleasants/Dana E. Salter: Writing Oneself into the Story – Amy Hill: Digital Storytelling and the Politics of Doing Good: Exploring the Ethics of Bringing Personal Narratives into Public Spheres – Ed Lee/Liz Miller: Entry Point: Participatory Media-Making with Queer and Trans Refugees: Social Locations, Agendas and Thinking Structurally – Pip Hardy/Tony Sumner: Our Stories, Ourselves: Exploring Identities, Sharing Experiences and Building Relationships through Patient Voices – Diana J. Nucera/Jeanette Lee: I Transform Myself, I Transform the World Around Me – Jason Edward Lewis/Skawennati Fragnito: You Want to Do What with Doda’s Stories? Building a Community for the Skins Workshops on Aboriginal Storytelling in Digital Media – Jesikah Maria Ross: Adventures in Community Media: Experiments, Findings, and Strategies for Change – Rob Simon/Jason Brennan/Sandro Bresba/Sara DeAngelis/Will Edwards/Helmi Jung/Anna Pisecny: The Teaching to Learn Project: Investigating Literacy through Intergenerational Inquiry – Josh Schachter/Julie Kasper: Finding Voice: Building Literacies and Communities Inside and Outside the Classroom – Ouida Washington/Derek Koen: Visions Beyond the Bricks: Reflections on Engaging Communities to Support Black Male Youth – Kofi Larweh/Jonathan Langdon: Seeing the Synergy in the Signals: Reflections on Weaving Projects into Social Movement Mobilizing through Community Radio.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433119750
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433119767
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York : Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
    UID:
    almahu_9948664722502882
    Format: 1 online resource (240 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453910399
    Series Statement: Rethinking Childhood 47
    Content: This book presents research exploring the potential for postfoundational theories to revitalize discussions in early childhood education. In the past two decades, postfoundation theories (e.g., postmodern, poststructural, feminist, postcolonial, etc.) have revolutionized the field of early childhood education, but at the same time, little has been written about the value and potential of this movement within the context of Canada. Postfoundational theories have the potential to disrupt normalizing early childhood education discourses that create and maintain social inequities, and to respect differences and diversities. Given the importance of diversity in Canada, it seems relevant to explore further how postfoundational theories might transform early childhood education.
    Content: «This is an important book for Canadian early childhood education. Some may find it disruptive, but that is in part its purpose – to question and to pose alternative discourses that open up to other ways of seeing and understanding. Such other ways are essential in a society as diverse as Canada. With this volume Canada joins a stimulating international community of scholars and early childhood educators who seek new insights and perspectives to guide the future of ECE in their own countries and internationally.» (Alan Pence, Professor, University of Victoria, Canada) «This edited collection is a must for international audiences of scholars, researchers, teachers, and educators. While the contributions are set within the Canadian landscape, the issues, dilemmas, tensions, provocations, and challenges are those facing all Western societies at this time. Robustly based on research and postfoundational theories, each chapter provides offerings for rethinking and reformulating early childhood education, family and child interactions, and the work of all those in early years education and social services.» (Judith Duncan, Associate Professor of Education, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand)
    Note: Contents: Daphney L. Curry/Gaile S. Cannella: Foreword - Reconceptualist Her/Histories in Early Childhood Studies: Challenges, Power Relations, and Critical Activism – Larry Prochner/Veronica Pacini-Ketchabaw: Resituating Early Childhood Education: Introduction – Katherine Davidson: The Integration of Cognitive and Sociocultural Theories of Literacy Development for Instruction and Research: Why? How? – Sherry Rose/Pam Whitty: Valuing Subjective Complexities: Disrupting the Tyranny of Time – Luigi Iannacci/Bente Graham: Addressing Divides and Binaries in Early Childhood Education: Disability, Discourse and Theory, and Practice in a Bachelor of Education Program – Rachel Langford: An Early Childhood Professional’s Authority: How Can It Be Used for Influencing and Instigating Action for Social Goods? – Zeenat Janmohamed: When Queer Enters Early Childhood Teacher Training: What’s So Inappropriate about That? – Judith K. Bernhard: Immigrant Parents Taking Part in Their Children’s Education: A Practical Experiment – Kathleen Kummen/Veronica Pacini- Ketchabaw/Deborah Thompson: Making Developmental Knowledge Stutter and Stumble: Continuing Pedagogical Explorations with Collective Biography – Anna Kirova: Children’s Representations of Cultural Scripts in Play: Facilitating Transition from Home to Preschool in an Intercultural Early Learning Program for Refugee Children – Mary Caroline Rowan: Resituating Practice through Teachers’s Storying of Children’s Interests – Beth Blue Swadener/Lacey Peters/Sonya Gaches: Taking Children’s Rights and Participation Seriously: Cross-national Perspectives and Possibilities.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433118340
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433118357
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1602990808
    Format: XVIII, 238 S.
    Edition: 1. publ.
    ISBN: 9780415628174 , 0415628172
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , Introduction: fleeing homophobia, asylum claims related to sexual orientation and gender identity in europe / Sabine JansenSexual orientation and refugee status determination over the past 20 years: unsteady progress through standard sequences? / Jenni Millbank -- Discretion in sexuality-based asylum cases: an adaptive phenomenon / Janna Wessels -- Accommodation: sur place claims and the accommodation requirement in Dutch asylum policy / Hemme Battjes -- Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender refugees: challenges in refugee status determination and living conditions in Turkey / Giulia Cragnolini -- Developing a jurisprudence of transgender particular social group / Laurie Berg and Jenni Millbank -- Normativity and credibility of sexual orientation in asylum decision making / Louis Middelkoop -- Invisible intersections, queer interventions: same sex family reunification under the rule of asylum law / Petra Sussner -- Overcoming problems with sexual minority refugee claims: is LGBT cultural competency training the solution? / Nicole Laviolette -- Sexuality identity, normativity and asylum / Thomas Spijkerboer. , Introduction: fleeing homophobia, asylum claims related to sexual orientation and gender identity in europe , Overcoming problems with sexual minority refugee claims : is LGBT cultural competency training the solution? , Discretion in sexuality-based asylum cases : an adaptive phenomenon , Accommodation : sur place claims and the accommodation requirement in Dutch asylum policy , Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender refugees : challenges in refugee status determination and living conditions in Turkey , Developing a jurisprudence of transgender particular social group , Sexual orientation and refugee status determination over the past 20 years : unsteady progress through standard sequences? , Normativity and credibility of sexual orientation in asylum decision making , Invisible intersections, queer interventions : same sex family reunification under the rule of asylum law , Sexuality, normativity and asylum : an agenda
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780203515723
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Fleeing homophobia London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2013 ISBN 9780203515723
    Language: English
    Subjects: Political Science , Law , Sociology
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Europa ; Asylrecht ; Geschlechtsidentität ; LGBT ; Konferenzschrift
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    UID:
    almahu_9948318269302882
    Format: xviii, 238 p.
    Edition: Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2015. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.
    Note: Introduction: fleeing homophobia, asylum claims related to sexual orientation and gender identity in europe / Sabine Jansen -- Overcoming problems with sexual minority refugee claims : is LGBT cultural competency training the solution? / Nicole LaViolette -- Discretion in sexuality-based asylum cases : an adaptive phenomenon / Janna Wessels -- Accommodation : sur place claims and the accommodation requirement in Dutch asylum policy / Hemme Battjes -- Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender refugees : challenges in refugee status determination and living conditions in Turkey / Giulia Cragnolini -- Developing a jurisprudence of transgender particular social group / Laurie Berg and Jenni Millbank -- Sexual orientation and refugee status determination over the past 20 years : unsteady progress through standard sequences? / Jenni Millbank -- Normativity and credibility of sexual orientation in asylum decision making / Louis Middelkoop -- Invisible intersections, queer interventions : same sex family reunification under the rule of asylum law / Petra Sussner -- Sexuality, normativity and asylum : an agenda / Thomas Spijkerboer.
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    UID:
    edocfu_9961382276602883
    Format: 1 online resource (272 pages)
    Content: All people are equal, according to Thomas Jefferson, but all migrants are not. In this volume, twelve eminent scholars describe and analyse how in countries such as France, the United States, Turkey, Canada, Mexico, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Denmark distinctions were made through history between migrants and how these were justified in policies and public debates. The chapters form a triptych, addressing in three clusters the problematisation of questions such as 'who is a refugee', 'who is family' and 'what is difference'. The chapters in this volume show that these are not separate issues. They intersect in ways that vary according to countries of origin and settlement, economic climate, geopolitical situation, as well as by gender, and by class, ethnicity, religion, and sexual orientation of the migrants.
    Note: Introduction -- Refugees and restrictionism -- New refugees? -- A gender-blind approach in Canadian refugee processes -- Queer asylum -- Belonging and membership -- Blood matters -- Gender, inequality and integration -- Take off that veil and give me access to your body -- Multiculturalism, dependent residence status and honour killings -- Conclusion -- About the authors.
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    UID:
    edoccha_9961382276602883
    Format: 1 online resource (272 pages)
    Content: All people are equal, according to Thomas Jefferson, but all migrants are not. In this volume, twelve eminent scholars describe and analyse how in countries such as France, the United States, Turkey, Canada, Mexico, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Denmark distinctions were made through history between migrants and how these were justified in policies and public debates. The chapters form a triptych, addressing in three clusters the problematisation of questions such as 'who is a refugee', 'who is family' and 'what is difference'. The chapters in this volume show that these are not separate issues. They intersect in ways that vary according to countries of origin and settlement, economic climate, geopolitical situation, as well as by gender, and by class, ethnicity, religion, and sexual orientation of the migrants.
    Note: Introduction -- Refugees and restrictionism -- New refugees? -- A gender-blind approach in Canadian refugee processes -- Queer asylum -- Belonging and membership -- Blood matters -- Gender, inequality and integration -- Take off that veil and give me access to your body -- Multiculturalism, dependent residence status and honour killings -- Conclusion -- About the authors.
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Did you mean refugee's queers?
Did you mean refugees queens?
Did you mean refugees queere?
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. Further information can be found on the KOBV privacy pages