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Dignity across borders : rethinking the protection of refugees and IDPs from an ethical perspectiveBado, Arsène Brice January 2010 (has links)
Thesis advisor: David Hollenbach / The purpose of this reflection – Dignity across borders: Rethinking the protection of refugees and IDPs from an ethical perspective – has been to challenge contemporary ways of thinking and dealing with issues related to refugees and IDPs. Today, refugees and IDPs are often reduced to their needs. They are often perceived as bodies to shelter, to heal or to clothe; mouths to feed; victims of persecution to protect, etc. In the same perspective, contemporary debates on treatments of refugees and IDPs tend to rotate around the financial costs of processing claims, social security benefits for asylum seekers, and social tensions arising from the presence of large numbers of refugees and IDPs in receiving countries or communities. While acknowledging the importance of all these issues and needs, the stance of this reflection has been to refocus the debate on the concept of human dignity which transcends borders such as nationality, ethnicity, religion, race, etc. From this standpoint, the debate changes and gains more fundamental and moral depths. From the same stance, but grounded in the biblical experience, the Roman Catholic Church‘s social discourse on refugees and IDPs challenges the current international refugee protection regime. Because all are created in the image and likeness of God, all humans share the same dignity. Their dignity and their rights as humans are not related to their citizenship, but to the fact that they have been born into the human family. This is the foundation of Christian universalism that challenges the current refugee protection regime that is based on the membership of states. Yet, Christian universalism includes also a realism that respects the state sovereignty within its borders. Conversely, the main claim of Catholic social teachings on refugee issues is that the refugee issues should not be perceived only from the standpoint of the state, such as national security concern and borders control. Above all, refugees should be perceived as human beings, as dignities across borders. / Thesis (STL) — Boston College, 2010. / Submitted to: Boston College. School of Theology and Ministry. / Discipline: Sacred Theology.
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‘Concerned not only with relief’: UNRRA’s work rehabilitating the Displaced Persons in the American zone of occupation in Germany, 1945-1947Greaves, Laura Megan 22 May 2013 (has links)
The purpose of the dissertation is to further our knowledge of the process of normalization in the displaced person (DP) camps in the American zone of occupation in Germany after the Second World War. The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) welfare workers brought with them their years of education and training in the United States, primarily as professional social workers, to their work in these camps. They believed that their task was not only to feed and clothe the DPs, but to provide rehabilitation as well. They continually emphasized the importance of reinstituting prewar social norms as the key element in rehabilitating the DPs. However, once they entered the DP camps in Germany, they soon discovered that the DPs had very different understandings of what constituted “normal life.” As a result, rehabilitation included not only reinstituting prewar social norms, but also introducing the DPs to new ones. UNRRA focused their rehabilitation efforts on six aspects of DP care: housing, cleanliness, education, work, and respect for civil and criminal law.
While the DP camps were administered by UNRRA, they existed next to German communities who governed by Military Government and in the midst of their own reconstruction efforts. Given the immense wartime destruction, widespread shortages and the arrival of large numbers of German refugees, resources for all groups were at a premium. As a result, there were numerous opportunities for creative and broad-minded people to work at solving problems in unconventional ways. While UNRRA planning had provided some direction for its welfare workers, staff working in field came to play an important role in defining UNRRA’s policies. At the same time, their competing goals of rehabilitation and repatriation, as well as their at-times difficult relationship with the military, worked to constrain their efforts. Nevertheless, when UNRRA’s tenure as administrator of the DP camps ended in the summer of 1947, they left behind a legacy which highlighted the importance of the successful integration of refugees into their societies, and which made rehabilitation as central as relief in all future humanitarian responses.
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Bureaucracy and forced displacement in Bogotá, Colombia : the construction of forced displacement victims and other procedures /Davila, Juana. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (J.S.M.)--Stanford University, 2009. / Submitted to the Stanford Program in International Legal Studies at the Stanford Law School, Stanford University. "April 2009." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 125-128). Also available online.
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‘Concerned not only with relief’: UNRRA’s work rehabilitating the Displaced Persons in the American zone of occupation in Germany, 1945-1947Greaves, Laura Megan 22 May 2013 (has links)
The purpose of the dissertation is to further our knowledge of the process of normalization in the displaced person (DP) camps in the American zone of occupation in Germany after the Second World War. The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) welfare workers brought with them their years of education and training in the United States, primarily as professional social workers, to their work in these camps. They believed that their task was not only to feed and clothe the DPs, but to provide rehabilitation as well. They continually emphasized the importance of reinstituting prewar social norms as the key element in rehabilitating the DPs. However, once they entered the DP camps in Germany, they soon discovered that the DPs had very different understandings of what constituted “normal life.” As a result, rehabilitation included not only reinstituting prewar social norms, but also introducing the DPs to new ones. UNRRA focused their rehabilitation efforts on six aspects of DP care: housing, cleanliness, education, work, and respect for civil and criminal law.
While the DP camps were administered by UNRRA, they existed next to German communities who governed by Military Government and in the midst of their own reconstruction efforts. Given the immense wartime destruction, widespread shortages and the arrival of large numbers of German refugees, resources for all groups were at a premium. As a result, there were numerous opportunities for creative and broad-minded people to work at solving problems in unconventional ways. While UNRRA planning had provided some direction for its welfare workers, staff working in field came to play an important role in defining UNRRA’s policies. At the same time, their competing goals of rehabilitation and repatriation, as well as their at-times difficult relationship with the military, worked to constrain their efforts. Nevertheless, when UNRRA’s tenure as administrator of the DP camps ended in the summer of 1947, they left behind a legacy which highlighted the importance of the successful integration of refugees into their societies, and which made rehabilitation as central as relief in all future humanitarian responses.
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Three microeconometric studies of displaced workers /Crossley, Thomas F. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- McMaster University, 1998. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available via World Wide Web.
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Job transfer skills for dislocated workersBrumbaugh, Dana Lynn. January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis--PlanB (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Stout, 1999. / Field project. Includes bibliographical references.
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Safe SpacesMordecki, Rachel Brianne 17 May 2014 (has links)
The scope of LGBTQ characters in fiction is wholly limited. When an LGBTQ character makes his or her way into a story, that character is usually flat and static and becomes a caricature rather than a whole character. My critical introduction maps the creation of each of my thesis stories and applies them to patterns that I have discovered while reading Victorian and contemporary literature that stereotypes, isolates, and/or punishes LGBTQ characters. I discuss the idea of displaced desire in Victorian works by Kate Chopin, M.E. Braddon, Oscar Wilde, and Sheridan Le Fanu, and also the stereotyping of characters in contemporary novels ala JK Rowling’s and Cassandra Clare’s novels. Then, in my body of fiction, I take those same patterns and turn them around so as to expose heteronormativity and filter it through a monstrous lens.
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Transitional Shelter for Displaced peopleBaradaranfallahkhair, Naseem January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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A descriptive study of the perceptions of employers, teachers and graduates of Oregon single parent/displaced homemaker programs regarding non-technical employment qualities needed on the jobAnderson, GwenEllyn 29 November 1995 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to explore the perceptions of employers, teachers and
graduates of the Oregon Carl Perkins Single Parent/Displaced Homemaker Programs
regarding non-technical employment qualities. The Luft "Non-Technical Employment
Qualities Survey Instrument" and open-ended questions were used to elicit personal
responses from members of each group for the purpose of comparing the results.
The research questions addressed the perceived rankings of non-technical employment
qualities, the extent to which programs were perceived to have addressed these nontechnical
employment qualities, the extent to which graduates were perceived to possess
these non-technical employment qualities, the extent to which graduates were perceived
to seek and receive feedback regarding these non-technical employment qualities, the
specific non-technical employment qualities that were perceived as essential prior to
entering the workforce, the perceptions as to why employees were terminated and the
perceived reasons why graduates left employment. The findings concluded that the
respondent populations were in general agreement as to their perceptions. Employers
and teachers agreed more frequently regarding their perceptions as to the extent
graduates possessed these non-technical employment qualities and the extent to which
graduates sought and received feedback. Graduates agreed more frequently with the
employers as to their rankings of the qualities needed, but there was great disagreement
between graduates, and their employers as to the number of qualities possessed and the
amount of feedback sought. Employers and teachers disagreed more frequently in their
rankings as to which qualities were the most important.
The principle implication of this research for education with regard to these populations
is that a close relationship between employers and the instructors preparing graduates
for employment is imperative.
The principle research recommendation entails further inquiry into the specific
behaviors that demonstrate the possession of these skills and that would prevent
employment termination. / Graduation date: 1996
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Georgia's structurally unemployed workers do state job training programs help? /Moody, Mitchell Lawrence. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D)--City and Regional Planning, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2009. / Committee Chair: Nancey Green Leigh; Committee Member: Bill Drummond; Committee Member: Michael Elliott; Committee Member: Thomas Boston; Committee Member: William Schaffer. Part of the SMARTech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Collection.
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