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Engendering forced migration: theory and practice
Doreen Marie Indra
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Frontmatter
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List of Tables (page ix)
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Acknowledgments (page x)
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Introduction (page xii)
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List of Abbreviations (page xix)
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Chapter 1: Not a "Room of One's Own": Engendering Forced Migration Knowledge and Practice (Doreen Indra, page 1)
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Chapter 2: Gendering Those Uprooted by 'Development' (Elizabeth Colson, page 23)
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Chapter 3: Interview with Barbara Harrell-Bond (Doreen Indra, page 40)
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Chapter 4: Girls and War Zones: Troubling Questions (Carolyn Nordstrom, page 63)
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Chapter 5: Gendered Violence in War: Reflections on Transnationalist and Comparative Frameworks in Militarized Conflict Zones (Wenona Giles, page 83)
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Chapter 6: Gender Relief and Politics During the Afghan War (Diana Cammack, page 94)
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Chapter 7: Response to Cammack (Peter Marsden, page 124)
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Chapter 8: Upsetting the Cart: Forced Migration and Gender Issues, the African Experience (Patrick Matlou, page 128)
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Chapter 9: Women Migrants of Kagera Region, Tanzania: The Need for Empowerment (Charles David Smith, page 146)
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Chapter 10: The Relevance of Gendered Approaches to Refugee Health: A Case Study in Hagadera, Kenya (Marleen Boelaert, Fabienne Vautier, Tine Dusauchoit, Wim Van Damme, and Monique Van Dormael, page 165)
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Chapter 11: Post-Soviet Russian Migration from the New Independent States: Experiences of Women Migrants (Natalya Kosmarskaya, page 177)
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Chapter 12: A Space for Remembering: Home-Pedagogy and Exilic Latina Women's Identities (Inés Gómez, page 200)
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Chapter 13: Eritrean Canadian Refugee Households As Sites of Gender Renegotiation (Atsuko Matsuoka and John Sorenson, page 218)
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Chapter 14: Negotiating Masculinity in the Reconstruction of Social Place: Eritrean and Ethiopian Refugees in the United States and Sweden (Lucia Ann McSpadden, page 242)
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Chapter 15: The Human Rights of Refugees with Special Reference to Muslim Refugee Women (Khadija Elmadmad, page 261)
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Chapter 16: A Comparative Analysis of the Canadian, US, and Australian Directives on Gender Persecution and Refugee Status (Audrey Macklin, page 272)
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Chapter 17: Women and Refugee Status: Beyond the Public/Private Dichotomy in UK Asylum Policy (Heaven Crawley, page 308)
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Chapter 18: The Problem of Gender-Related Persecution: A Challenge of International Protection (Lisa Gilad, page 334)
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Chapter 19: Anthropologists As 'Expert Witnesses' (Sidney Waldron, page 343)
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Notes on Contributors (page 350)
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References (page 355)
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Index (page 380)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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DIP | 9.4 (Aug. 1999): 495-496 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/4029489 |
SIG | 28.4 (Summer 2003): 1318-1323 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/374290 |
Citable Link
Published: 2008
Publisher: Berghahn Books
- 9781782381594 (ebook)
- 9781571811356 (paper)
- 9781571811349 (hardcover)