Identity, writes Pipher, is no longer based on territory. The world community is small and interconnected. We can learn from this to be kinder and more appreciative of life. And we can learn the importance of understanding the perspectives of all our neighbors in our global village. Philosophically poignant, The Middle of Everywhere presents rich, descriptive narratives of hope, courage, tragedy and resilience through the life-stories of refugees and immigrants, from Bosnia to the Sudan, struggling to create home in Lincoln, Nebraska. Significantly, although refugee experiences in one particular Midwestern city are highlighted, one can imagine that any community of similar size across the entire Great Plains region could be substituted...
Departures is the introductory volume to the interdisciplinary field of Critical Refugee Studies, wr...
With nearly two decades’ experience writing on urban sustainability issues, Timothy Beatley has esta...
Review of 'Exile Cultures, Misplaced Identities' by Paul Allatson and Jo McCormack
Identity, writes Pipher, is no longer based on territory. The world community is small and interco...
Pipher, author of The Middle of Everywhere: Helping ReJugees Enter the American Community, has writt...
Review of: "How to Make a Life: A Tibetan Refugee Family and the Midwestern Woman They Adopted" byMa...
Catherine Besteman conduced fieldwork in the late 1980’s in the small village of Banta in southern S...
Book review of Lynellyn D. Long and Ellen Oxfeld (Eds.), Coming Home? Refugees, Migrants and Those W...
Living on the Margins: Undocumented Migrants in a Global City captures the lived experiences of undo...
Hollowing out the middle refers to the loss of the well-educated young adults in rural communities ...
[Extract] Over the last twenty years, social scientists have engaged in ongoing debates to extend th...
Review of the book Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team, and One Woman\u27s Quest to M...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
Peter Mares reviews a new book that reveals the complex and diverse reasons why people leave their h...
This fascinating and insightful book is a comparative ethnographic study of Vietnamese and Soviet Je...
Departures is the introductory volume to the interdisciplinary field of Critical Refugee Studies, wr...
With nearly two decades’ experience writing on urban sustainability issues, Timothy Beatley has esta...
Review of 'Exile Cultures, Misplaced Identities' by Paul Allatson and Jo McCormack
Identity, writes Pipher, is no longer based on territory. The world community is small and interco...
Pipher, author of The Middle of Everywhere: Helping ReJugees Enter the American Community, has writt...
Review of: "How to Make a Life: A Tibetan Refugee Family and the Midwestern Woman They Adopted" byMa...
Catherine Besteman conduced fieldwork in the late 1980’s in the small village of Banta in southern S...
Book review of Lynellyn D. Long and Ellen Oxfeld (Eds.), Coming Home? Refugees, Migrants and Those W...
Living on the Margins: Undocumented Migrants in a Global City captures the lived experiences of undo...
Hollowing out the middle refers to the loss of the well-educated young adults in rural communities ...
[Extract] Over the last twenty years, social scientists have engaged in ongoing debates to extend th...
Review of the book Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team, and One Woman\u27s Quest to M...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
Peter Mares reviews a new book that reveals the complex and diverse reasons why people leave their h...
This fascinating and insightful book is a comparative ethnographic study of Vietnamese and Soviet Je...
Departures is the introductory volume to the interdisciplinary field of Critical Refugee Studies, wr...
With nearly two decades’ experience writing on urban sustainability issues, Timothy Beatley has esta...
Review of 'Exile Cultures, Misplaced Identities' by Paul Allatson and Jo McCormack